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Interpreter: A Journal of
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Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture. Orem, UT: 2012-2018. https://journal.interpreterfoundation.org/.
ID = [6481]  Status = Type = compendium  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 29  Rebuilt: 8/5/24 7:09:34
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship. Orem, UT: 2018-Present. https://journal.interpreterfoundation.org/.
ID = [6505]  Status = Type = compendium  Date = 2018-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 30  Rebuilt: 8/5/24 7:09:34
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship, Volume 51 (2022). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2022.
ID = [12434]  Status = Type = compendium  Date = 2022-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 13  Rebuilt: 8/5/24 7:13:12
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship, Volume 52 (2022). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2022.
ID = [12436]  Status = Type = compendium  Date = 2022-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 11  Rebuilt: 8/5/24 7:13:12
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship, Volume 59 (2023). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2023.
ID = [81874]  Status = Type = book,compendium  Date = 2023-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 10  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 11:15:45

Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture
     Volume 1 (2012)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Charity in Defending the Kingdom.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 1 (2012): i-ix.
Display Abstract  

With one striking exception, leaders and members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are, and always have been, flawed people. (No better quality of human is available.) “We have this treasure in earthen vessels,” the apostle Paul said, referring to the gospel and its mortal ministers, “that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us” (2 Corinthians 4:7).

ID = [4388]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 15096  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 1 (2012). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2012.
ID = [4410]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 10  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30
Bokovoy, David E. “‘Thou Knowest That I Believe’: Invoking The Spirit of the Lord as Council Witness in 1 Nephi 11.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 1 (2012): 1-23.
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Abstract: The Book of Mormon features an esoteric exchange between the prophet Nephi and the Spirit of the Lord on an exceedingly high mountain. The following essay explores some of the ways in which an Israelite familiar with ancient religious experiences and scribal techniques might have interpreted this event. The analysis shows that Nephi’s conversation, as well as other similar accounts in the Book of Mormon, echoes an ancient temple motif. As part of this paradigm, the essay explores the manner in which the text depicts the Spirit of the Lord in a role associated with members of the divine council in both biblical and general Near Eastern conceptions. .

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Mosiah
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
ID = [4389]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 42962  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Wright, Mark Alan, and Brant A. Gardner. “The Cultural Context of Nephite Apostasy.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 1 (2012): 25-55.
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Abstract: Nephite apostates turned away from true worship in consistent and predictable ways throughout the Book of Mormon. Their beliefs and practices may have been the result of influence from the larger socioreligious context in which the Nephites lived. A Mesoamerican setting provides a plausible cultural background that explains why Nephite apostasy took the particular form it did and may help us gain a deeper understanding of some specific references that Nephite prophets used when combating that apostasy. We propose that apostate Nephite religion resulted from the syncretization of certain beliefs and practices from normative Nephite religion with those attested in ancient Mesoamerica. We suggest that orthodox Nephite expectations of the “heavenly king” were supplanted by the more present and tangible “divine king.”.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Mosiah
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
ID = [4390]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 61638  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Mitton, George L. “Book Review: Temple Themes in the Book of Moses, by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 1 (2012): 57-59.
ID = [4391]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 3556  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Hamblin, William J. “‘I Have Revealed Your Name’: The Hidden Temple in John 17.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 1 (2012): 61-89.
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Abstract: John 17 contains a richly symbolic Last Discourse by Jesus, in which the disciples are assured a place in the Father’s celestial house or temple. To fulfill this promise Christ reveals both the Father’s name and his glory to his disciples. Jesus’s discourse concludes with the promise of sanctification of the disciples, and their unification—or deification—with Christ and the Father. This paper explores how each of these ideas reflects the temple theology of the Bible and contemporary first-century Judaism.

ID = [4392]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 58200  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Sorenson, John L. “An Open Letter to Dr. Michael Coe.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 1 (2012): 91-109.
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Abstract: In August 2011 John Dehlin conducted a three-part interview with famed Mesoamericanist Michael Coe. Dehlin operates the podcast series Mormon Stories, which features interviews discussing the faith and culture of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. This article examines a large number of dubious claims made in those interviews, providing clarifications, responses, and references to numerous sources dealing with those issues. Much more detail will be forthcoming in Dr. Sorenson’s new book, Mormon’s Codex.

ID = [4393]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,sorenson  Size: 37761  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:29
Midgley, Louis C. “Atheist Piety: A Religion of Dogmatic Dubiety.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 1 (2012): 111-143.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The “Special Feature” of this mass-market secular humanist magazine consists of an introduction to “America’s Peculiar Piety” followed by a miscellany of brief, nonscholarly essays critical of The Church of Jesus Christ. The questions posed in the introduction to this flagship atheist magazine go unaddressed in the essays. Some of the essays are personal exit stories by former Latter-day Saints. One is an effort by Robert M. Price to explain away the Book of Mormon without confronting its contents. This is done by ignoring the details of Joseph Smith’s career in order to picture him as the equivalent of a bizarre, emotionally conflicted figure like Charles Manson or as the embodiment of one of a wide range of mythical trickster figures like Brer Rabbit, Felix the Cat, or Doctor Who. The assumed link between these mythical or legendary figures and Joseph Smith is said to be a Jungian archetype lodged in his presumably deranged psyche, leading him to fashion the Book of Mormon.
Another essay merely mentions the well-known criticisms of Joseph Smith by Abner Cole (a.k.a. Obadiah Dogberry), while others complain that the faith of the Saints tends to meet emotional needs or that their religious community has various ways of reinforcing their own moral demands. In no instance do these authors see their own deeply held ideology as serving similar personal and community-sustaining religious functions.
All of the essays reflect a fashionable, dogmatic, naive, and deeply religious enmity toward the faith of Latter-day Saints. The essays are also shown to be instances of a modern militant atheism, which is contrasted with earlier and much less bold and aggressive doubts about divine things. The ideological links between those responsible for Free Inquiry and some critics on the fringes of the LDS community are also clearly identified.
Review of Tom Flynn et al. “America’s Peculiar Piety: Why Did Mormonism Grow? Why Does It Endure?” Free Inquiry, October/November 2011, 21–41.So then, remember that at one time you Gentiles . . . were without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God [atheos] in the world. (Ephesians 2:11–12 NRSV).

ID = [4394]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64352  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:29
Midgley, Louis C. “Book Review: Latter-day Scripture: Studies in the Book of Mormon, by Robert M. Price.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 1 (2012): 145-150.
Display Abstract  

Robert M. Price. Latter-day Scripture: Studies in the Book of Mormon. Self-published e-book, 2011 (http://www.eBookIt.com). 78 pp., no index, no pagination. $10.95.

ID = [4395]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 10616  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:29
Nicholson, Roger. “Mormonism and Wikipedia: The Church History That ‘Anyone Can Edit’” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 1 (2012): 151-190.
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Abstract: The ability to quickly and easily access literature critical of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been made significantly easier through the advent of the Internet. One of the primary sites that dominates search engine results is Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia that “anyone can edit.” Wikipedia contains a large number of articles related to Mormonism that are edited by believers, critics, and neutral parties. The reliability of information regarding the Church and its history is subject to the biases of the editors who choose to modify those articles. Even if a wiki article is thoroughly sourced, editors sometimes employ source material in a manner that supports their bias. This essay explores the dynamics behind the creation of Wikipedia articles about the Church, the role that believers and critics play in that process, and the reliability of the information produced in the resulting wiki articles.The fact that this [Wikipedia] article has been stable for months suggests that other Mormons have found the evidence unassailable. ((Comment posted by Wikipedia editor “John Foxe,” responding to an LDS editor on the “Three Witnesses” Wikipedia talk page, 27 January 2009.)).

ID = [4396]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64214  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:29
Hancock, Ralph C. “To Really Read the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 1 (2012): 191-195.
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Review of Grant Hardy. Understanding the Book of Mormon: A Reader’s Guide. New York: Oxford University Press, 2010. xix + 346 pp., with index. $29.95.

ID = [4397]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 7445  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:29

Volume 2 (2012)

Peterson, Daniel C. “The Role of Apologetics in Mormon Studies.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 2 (2012): i-xxxvi.
Display Abstract  

The following essay was presented on 3 August 2012 as “Of ‘Mormon Studies’ and Apologetics” at the conclusion of the annual conference of the Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research (FAIR) in Sandy, Utah. It represents the first public announcement and appearance of Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, which had been founded only slightly more than a week earlier, on 26 July. In my view, that rapid launch was the near-miraculous product of selfless collaboration and devotion to a cause on the part of several people—notable among them David E. Bokovoy, Alison V. P. Coutts, William J. Hamblin, Bryce M. Haymond, Louis C. Midgley, George L. Mitton, Stephen D. Ricks, and Mark Alan Wright—and I’m profoundly grateful to them. This essay, which may even have some slight historical value, is something of a personal charter statement regarding that cause. It is published here with no substantial alteration.

ID = [4377]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 64598  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Hedelius, Cassandra S. “Attacking Rather Than Explaining.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 2 (2012): 1-16.
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Abstract: In his book on Mormonism, the Reverend Andrew Jackson claims to explain “the teaching and practices of the LDS Church,” with an intended audience of non-Mormon Christians but also “interested Mormons.” He doesn’t succeed well. Although his presentation of Mormon history is mostly fair, his discussion of the faith of Latter-day Saints devolves into the usual anti-Mormon tropes, to which he adds a celebration of a simplified evangelical theology. What might have been a useful, straightforward account of The Church of Jesus Christ and its history ended up, instead, as a clumsy attack. Reverend Jackson eventually re-released his book under a different title as a warning against what he considers Mitt Romney’s reticence to publicly explain his faith to the Reverend’s specifications. The later iteration of Reverend Jackson’s opinions was not even revised beyond a new introduction, making plain his basic antagonistic agenda.
Review of Andrew Jackson, What Latter-day Saints Teach and Practice: Mormonism Explained, Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books [a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers], 2008. 208 pp., with four appendixes, name index, and scripture index. $29.64 (paperback).

ID = [4378]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 29772  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 2 (2012). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2012.
ID = [4411]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 11  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30
Harper, Steven C. “Evaluating Three Arguments Against Joseph Smith’s First Vision.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 2 (2012): 17-33.
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Abstract: Historically there have been just three basic arguments against the authenticity of Joseph Smith’s first vision. They all begin with the a priori premise that such a vision simply could not have happened. The arguments originated with the Methodist minister to whom Joseph related his vision, author Fawn Brodie, and the Reverend Wesley Walters. The minister’s critique is explained by Methodism’s shift away from ecstatic religious experience. Fawn Brodie is shown to have made innovative yet flawed arguments within the narrow scope allowed by her conclusion that Joseph was a charlatan—a conclusion that did not allow for alternative interpretations of new evidence. Walters is shown to make fallacious arguments of irrelevant proof and negative proof in his understandably determined effort to undermine Joseph Smith’s credibility. Close-minded believers in Joseph’s vision are similarly likely to make unfounded assumptions unless they become open to the rich historical record Joseph created. Belief in the vision should correspond to Christian empathy for and civility toward critics.

ID = [4379]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 32418  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Midgley, Louis C. “Christian Faith in Contemporary China.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 2 (2012): 35-39.
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Review of Lian Xi. Redeemed by Fire: The Rise of Popular Christianity in Modern China. New Haven: Yale University, 2010. 352 pp., with glossary, bibliography and index. $45.00 (hardcover).

ID = [4380]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 8869  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Bradshaw, Jeffrey M., Jacob A. Rennaker, and David J. Larsen. “Revisiting the Forgotten Voices of Weeping in Moses 7: A Comparison with Ancient Texts.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 2 (2012): 41-71.
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Abstract: The LDS Book of Moses is remarkable in its depiction of the suffering of the wicked at the time of the Flood. According to this text, there are three parties directly involved in the weeping: God (Moses 7:28; cf. v. 29), the heavens (Moses 7:28, 37), and Enoch (Moses 7:41, 49). In addition, a fourth party, the earth, mourns—though does not weep—for her children (Moses 7:48–49). The passages that speak of the weeping God and the mourning earth have received the greatest share of attention by scholars. The purpose of this article is to round out the previous discussion so as to include new insights and ancient parallels to the two voices of weeping that have been largely forgotten—that of Enoch and that of the heavens. ((An expanded and revised version of material contained in this study will appear as part of Jeffrey M. Bradshaw and David J. Larsen, Enoch, Noah, and the Tower of Babel (Salt Lake City, UT: Eborn Publishing, forthcoming, 2014). All translations from non-English sources are by the first author unless otherwise specifically noted.)) .

Topics:    Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
ID = [4381]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  bradshaw,interpreter-journal,moses  Size: 61506  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Tvedtnes, John A. “Variants in the Stories of the First Vision of Joseph Smith and the Apostle Paul.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 2 (2012): 73-86.
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Abstract: Some critics of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have noted that the different accounts of Joseph Smith’s first vision, though written by the prophet himself, vary in some details. They see this as evidence that the event did not take place and was merely invented to establish divine authority for his work. They fail to realize that the versions of Paul’s vision on the road to Damascus, in which the risen Christ appeared to him, also differ from one another. Indeed, they vary more than Joseph Smith’s accounts of his experience. This article examines those variants.

ID = [4382]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 17416  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Reynolds, Noel B. “Rethinking the Apostle Peter’s Role in the Early Church.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 2 (2012): 87-91.
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Review of Martin Hengel, Saint Peter: The Underestimated Apostle. English translation by Thomas H. Trapp. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans, 2010. 161 pp., with indices. $18.00.

ID = [4383]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 8757  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Skousen, Royal. “Why was one sixth of the 1830 Book of Mormon set from the original manuscript?” Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture 2 (2012): 93-103.
Display Abstract  Display Keywords

Abstract: Evidence from the manuscripts of the Book of Mormon (as well as internal evidence within the Book of Mormon itself) shows that for one sixth of the text, from Helaman 13:17 to the end of Mormon, the 1830 edition of the Book of Mormon was set from the original (dictated) manuscript rather than from the printer’s manuscript. For five-sixths of the text, the 1830 edition was set from the printer’s manuscript, the copy prepared specifically for the 1830 typesetter to use as his copytext. In 1990, when the use of the original manuscript as copytext was first discovered, it was assumed that the scribes for the printer’s manuscript had fallen behind in their copywork, which had then forced them to take in the original manuscript to the 1830 typesetter. Historical evidence now argues, to the contrary, that the reason for the switch was the need to take the printer’s manuscript to Canada in February 1830 in order to secure the copyright of the Book of Mormon within the British realm. During the month or so that Oliver Cowdery and others were on their trip to nearby Canada with the printer’s manuscript, the 1830 typesetter used the original manuscript to set the type, although he himself was unaware that there had been a temporary switch in the manuscripts.

Keywords: Early Church History; Original Manuscript of the Book of Mormon; Translation
Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Helaman
ID = [4384]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  bmc-archive,bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 20579  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Smoot, Stephen O. “Shaken Faith Syndrome and the Case for Faith.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 2 (2012): 105-126.
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Abstract: Michael R. Ash is a Mormon apologist who has written two thoughtful books and a number of insightful articles exploring a wide range of controversial issues within Mormonism. His recent book Shaken Faith Syndrome: Strengthening One’s Testimony in the Face of Criticism and Doubt is an outstanding apologetic resource for individuals searching for faith-promoting answers that directly confront anti-Mormon allegations and criticisms. Ash does an excellent job in both succinctly explaining many of the criticisms leveled against The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and articulating compelling answers to these criticisms.
Review of Michael R. Ash. Shaken Faith Syndrome: Strengthening One’s Testimony in the Face of Criticism and Doubt. Redding, CA: Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research, 2008. x + 301 pp., with index. $19.95 (paperback).
“Wherefore Didst Thou Doubt?”
(Matthew 14:31).

ID = [4385]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 45313  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Midgley, Louis C. “Defending the King and His Kingdom.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 2 (2012): 127-144.
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Again, if the trumpet does not sound a clear call, who will get ready for battle?
1 Corinthians 14:8 NIV
Abstract: Some vocal cultural Mormons, busy asking themselves “why stay,” claim that it is not at all probable that there is a God, or that there even was a Jesus of Nazareth. They also ridicule the Atonement. In the language of our scriptures they are antichrists—that is, they deny that there was or is a Christ. Being thus against the King and His Kingdom, their trumpet does not give a clear sound; they are clearly against the one whom they made a solemn covenant to defend and sustain. Instead of seeking diligently to become genuine Holy Ones or Saints, they worship an idol—they have turned from the Way by fashioning an idol. They preach and practice a petty idolatry. Genuine Saints, including disciple-scholars, have a duty to defend the King and His Kingdom.

ID = [4386]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 35912  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28
Gee, John. “The Apocryphal Acts of Jesus.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 2 (2012): 145-187.
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Abstract: Numerous noncanonical accounts of Jesus’s deeds exist. While some Latter-day Saints would like to find plain and precious things in the apocryphal accounts, few are to be found. Three types of accounts deal with Jesus as a child, his mortal ministry, or after his resurrection. The Jesus of the infancy gospels does not act like the Jesus of the real gospels. The apocryphal accounts of Jesus’s ministry usually push a particular theological agenda. The accounts of Jesus’s post-resurrection teaching often contain intriguing but bizarre information. On the whole, apocryphal accounts of Jesus’s ministry probably contain less useful information for Latter-day Saints than they might expect.

ID = [4387]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2012-01-02  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64524  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:28

Volume 3 (2013)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Reflecting on Gospel Scholarship with Abū al-Walīd and Abū Ḥāmid.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 3 (2013): v-xxxii.
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The theologian, jurist, philosopher, and mystic Abu ?amid Mu?ammad b. Mu?ammad al-Ghazali (d. AD 1111 in his Persian hometown of Tus, after spending much of his career in Baghdad) has sometimes been characterized as the single most influential Muslim besides the Prophet Mu?ammad himself. The Andalusian philosopher and jurist Abu al-Walid Mu?ammad b. A?mad b. Rushd (d. AD 1198 in Marrakesh, modern-day Morocco, but ultimately buried in his family tomb in Córdoba, Spain) is generally considered to be the greatest medieval commentator—whether Jewish, Christian, or Muslim—on the works of Aristotle. Often known as Averroës, a corruption of his Arabic name, Ibn Rushd was respected even by medieval Christians. For example, Dante Alighieri, in his immortal Inferno, placed him only on the rim of Hell—in the relatively benign Limbo of unbaptized infants—and not among the torturous punishments of Hell’s lower levels.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
ID = [4367]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 50171  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Hedelius, Cassandra S. “Book Review: Comparing and Evaluating the Scriptures: A Timely Challenge for Jews, Christians, Muslims, and Mormons.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 3 (2013): 1-5.
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Review of Paul F. Fink. Comparing and Evaluating the Scriptures: A Timely Challenge for Jews, Christians, Muslims, and Mormons. Lompoc, CA: Summerland Publishing, 2008. 166 pp. $16.95 (paperback and e-book format).

ID = [4368]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 8447  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Tvedtnes, John A. “Biblical and Non-Biblical Quotes in the Sermons and Epistles of Paul.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 3 (2013): 7-61.
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Abstract: In 2010, BYU’s Neal A. Maxwell Institute published an article in which I demonstrated that the charge of plagiarism, frequently leveled against Joseph Smith by critics, is untrue. ((John A. Tvedtnes, “Was Joseph Smith Guilty of Plagiarism?” FARMS Review 22/1 (2010): 261–75.)) I noted, among other things, that the authors of books of the Bible sometimes quoted their predecessors. One of those authors was the apostle Paul, who drew upon a wide range of earlier texts in his epistles. This article discusses and demonstrates his sources.

ID = [4369]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 63711  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 3 (2013). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2013.
ID = [4412]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 10  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30
Midgley, Louis C. “Evangelical Controversy: A Deeply Fragmented Movement.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 3 (2013): 63-84.
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Review of Kevin T. Bauder, R. Albert Mohler Jr., John G. Stackhouse Jr., Roger E. Olson. Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism. Edited by Stanley N. Gundry, Andrew David Naselli, and Collin Hansen. Introduction by Collin Hansen. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2011. 222 pp., with scripture index and general index. $16.99 (paperback).
Abstract: Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism should be helpful to Latter-day Saints (and others) seeking to understand some of the theological controversies lurking behind contemporary fundamentalist/evangelical religiosity. Four theologians spread along a spectrum speak for different competing factions of conservative Protestants: Kevin Bauder  ((Bauder is a research professor at Central Baptist Theological Seminary in Minneapolis, Minnesota.)) for what turns out to be his own somewhat moderate version of Protestant fundamentalism; Al Mohler ((In 1993 Mohler became the President of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.))  for conservative/confessional ((The labels used to identify the brand of fundamentalism/evangelicalism for which each author speaks are somewhat problematic. For example, to me it seems that Al Mohler speaks for the Calvinist/Reformed version of evangelicalism which is currently in ascendance within the Southern Baptist Convention.))  evangelicalism; John Stackhouse ((Stackhouse is professor of theology and culture at Regent College in Vancouver, Canada.))  for generic evangelicalism; and Roger Olson ((Olson is professor of theology at George W. Truett Theological Seminary at Baylor University.)) for postconservative evangelicalism. Each author introduces his own position and then is critiqued in turn by the others, after which there is a rejoinder. In addition, as I point out in detail, each of these authors has something negative to say about the faith of Latter-day Saints.

ID = [4370]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 44561  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Larsen, Val. “In His Footsteps: Ammon₁ and Ammon₂.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 3 (2013): 85-113.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: Mormon is a historian with a literary sensibility and considerable literary skill. Though his core message is readily apparent to any competent reader, his history nevertheless rewards close reading. Its great scope means that much that is said must be said by implication. And its witness of Christ is sometimes expressed through subtle narrative parallels or through historical allegory. This article focuses on parallel narratives that feature Ammon1 and Ammon2, with special attention to the allegorical account of Ammon2 at the waters of Sebus. To fully comprehend the power of the testimony of Christ that Mormon communicates in his Ammon narratives, readers must glean from textual details an understanding of the social and political context in which the narratives unfold. ((Peter Eubanks, Brant Gardner, Grant Hardy, and two reviewers at Interpreter read and helpfully commented on an a previous draft of this article.)).

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Mosiah
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
ID = [4371]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 58023  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Boylan, Robert S. “Book Review: Forgery and Counterforgery: The Use of Literary Deceit in Early Christian Polemics, by Bart D. Ehrman.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 3 (2013): 115-118.
Display Abstract  

Review of Bart D. Ehrman. Forgery and Counterforgery: The Use of Literary Deceit in Early Christian Polemics. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012). x + 628 pp, including bibliography and index. $39.95. Hardback.

ID = [4372]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 7147  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Gardner, Brant A. “From the East to the West: The Problem of Directions in the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 3 (2013): 119-153.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The 1985 publication of John L. Sorenson’s An Ancient American Setting for the Book of Mormon presented the best argument for a New World location for the Book of Mormon. For all of its strengths, however, one aspect of the model has remained perplexing. It appeared that in order to accept that correlation one must accept that the Nephites rotated north to what we typically understand as northwest. The internal connections between text and geography were tighter than any previous correlation, and the connections between that particular geography and the history of the peoples who lived in that place during Book of Mormon times was also impressive. There was just that little problem of north not being north. This paper reexamines the Book of Mormon directional terms and interprets them against the cultural system that was prevalent in the area defined by Sorenson’s geographical correlation. The result is a way to understand Book of Mormon directions without requiring any skewing of magnetic north.

ID = [4373]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64265  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Thompson, A. Keith. “Nephite insights into Israelite Worship Practices before the Babylonian Captivity.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 3 (2013): 155-195.
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Abstract: General historical consensus holds that synagogues originated before the destruction of the Second Temple in AD 70, and therefore probably originated during the Babylonian captivity. The suggestion in Philo and Josephus that synagogues may have originated during the exodus was discredited by some historians in the 17th century, yet the Book of Mormon speaks of synagogues, sanctuaries, and places of worship in a manner which suggests that Lehi and his party brought some form of synagogal worship with them when they left Jerusalem around 600 BC. This essay revisits the most up to date scholarship regarding the origin of the synagogue and suggests that the Book of Mormon record provides ample reason to look for the origins of the synagogue much earlier that has become the academic custom.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Book of Mormon Scriptures > 2 Nephi
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
ID = [4374]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 65067  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Foster, Craig L. “New Light and Old Shadows: John G. Turner’s Attempt to Understand Brigham Young.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 3 (2013): 197-222.
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Review of John G. Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet (Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2012), viii, 500, map, photos, notes, index.

ID = [4375]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  brigham,interpreter-journal  Size: 52119  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27
Johnson, Hollis R. “One Day to a Cubit.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 3 (2013): 223-230.
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Abstract: An investigation of ancient astronomy shows that a cubit was used not only as the metric of length (elbow to fingertip) but also as a metric of angle in the sky. That suggested a new interpretation that fits naturally: the brightest celestial object—the sun—moves eastward around the sky, relative to the stars, during the course of a year, by one cubit per day!.

ID = [4376]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  abraham,interpreter-journal  Size: 12436  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27

Volume 4 (2013)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Standing on the Shoulders of Giants.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): vii-xiii.
ID = [4355]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 11610  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
Bradshaw, Jeffrey M., and David J. Larsen. “Ancient Affinities within the LDS Book of Enoch Part One.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 1-27.
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Abstract: In this article, we will examine affinities between ancient extracanonical sources and a collection of modern revelations that Joseph Smith termed “extracts from the Prophecy of Enoch.” We build on the work of previous scholars, revisiting their findings with the benefit of subsequent scholarship. Following a perspective on the LDS canon and an introduction to the LDS Enoch revelations, we will focus on relevant passages in pseudepigrapha and LDS scripture within three episodes in the Mormon Enoch narrative: Enoch’s prophetic commission, Enoch’s encounters with the “gibborim,” and the weeping and exaltation of Enoch and his people.

Topics:    Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
ID = [4356]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bradshaw,interpreter-journal  Size: 60779  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
Bradshaw, Jeffrey M., and David J. Larsen. “Ancient Affinities within the LDS Book of Enoch Part Two.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 29-74.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: In this article, we will examine affinities between ancient extracanonical sources and a collection of modern revelations that Joseph Smith termed “extracts from the Prophecy of Enoch.” We build on the work of previous scholars, revisiting their findings with the benefit of subsequent scholarship. Following a perspective on the LDS canon and an introduction to the LDS Enoch revelations, we will focus on relevant passages in pseudepigrapha and LDS scripture within three episodes in the Mormon Enoch narrative: Enoch’s prophetic commission, Enoch’s encounters with the “gibborim,” and the weeping and exaltation of Enoch and his people.

Topics:    Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
ID = [4357]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bradshaw,interpreter-journal,moses  Size: 64071  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 4 (2013). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2013.
ID = [4413]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 12  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30
Rappleye, Neal. “Trusting Joseph.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 75-83.
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Abstract: The “first steps” of Mormon history are vital to the faith claims of the Latter-day Saints. The new volume Exploring the First Vision, edited by Samuel Alonzo Dodge and Steven C. Harper, compiles research into the historical veracity of Joseph Smith’s First Vision narrative which shows the Prophet to have been a reliable and trustworthy witness. Ultimately, historical investigation can neither prove nor disprove that Joseph had a theophany in the woods in 1820. Individuals must therefore reach their conclusions by some other means.
Review of Samuel Alonzo Dodge and Steven C. Harper, eds. Exploring the First Vision. Provo, Utah: BYU Religious Studies Center, 2012. 338 pp. with index. $25.99If the beginning of the promenade of Mormon history, the First Vision and the Book of Mormon, can survive the crisis, then the rest of the promenade follows and nothing that happens in it can really detract from the miracle of the whole. If the first steps do not survive, there can be only antiquarian, not fateful or faith-full interest in the rest of the story.
Martin E. Marty ((Martin E. Marty, “Two Integrities: An Address to the Crisis in Mormon Historiography,” Journal of Mormon History 10 (1983): 9, capitalization altered.)).

ID = [4358]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 17702  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
Midgley, Louis C. “Confronting Five-Point Calvinism.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 85-92.
Display Abstract  

Review of Roger E. Olson. Against Calvinism. Foreword by Michael Horton, author of For Calvinism. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2011. 207 pp., no index. $16.99 (paperback).

ID = [4359]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 14393  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
Gee, John. “Whither Mormon Studies?” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 93-130.
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Abstract: The proliferation of Mormon Studies is surprising, considering that many of the basic questions about the field have never been answered. This paper looks at a number of basic questions about Mormon Studies that are of either academic concern or concern for members of the Church of Jesus Christ. They include such questions as whether Mormon Studies is a discipline, whether those who do Mormon Studies necessarily know what is going on in the Church, or if they interpret their findings correctly, whether there is any core knowledge that those who do Mormon Studies can or should have, what sort of topics Mormon Studies covers or should cover and whether those topics really have anything to do with what Mormons actually do or think about, whether Mormon Studies has ulterior political or religious motives, and whether it helps or hurts the Kingdom. Is Mormon Studies a waste of students’ time and donors’ money? Though the paper does not come up with definitive answers to any of those questions, it sketches ways of looking at them from a perspective within the restored Gospel and suggests that these issues ought to be more carefully considered before Latter-day Saints dive headlong into Mormon Studies in general.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
ID = [4360]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64607  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
Givens, Terryl L. “Letter to a Doubter.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 131-146.
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I understand that some doubts have arisen in your mind. I don’t know for sure what they are, but I imagine I have heard them before. Probably I have entertained some of them in my own mind. And perhaps I still harbor some of them myself. I am not going to respond to them in the ways that you may have anticipated. Oh, I will say a few things about why many doubts felt by the previously faithful and faith-filled are ill-founded and misplaced: the result of poor teaching, naïve assumptions, cultural pressures, and outright false doctrines. But my main purpose in writing this letter is not to resolve the uncertainties and perplexities in your mind. I want, rather, to endow them with the dignity and seriousness they deserve. And even to celebrate them. That may sound perverse, but I hope to show you it is not.

ID = [4361]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 28533  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
Hamblin, William J. “The Sôd of YHWH and the Endowment.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 147-154.
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Abstract: In the Hebrew Bible, the Sôd of God was a council of celestial beings who consulted with God, learned His sôd/secret plan, and then fulfilled that plan. This paper argues that the LDS endowment is, in part, a ritual reenactment of the sôd, where the participants observe the sôd/council of God, learn the sôd/secret plan of God, and covenant to fulfill that plan.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Old Testament Scriptures > Job
Old Testament Scriptures > Isaiah
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
Old Testament Scriptures > Twelve Minor Prophets
ID = [4362]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  abraham,bom,interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 11454  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
Ricks, Stephen D. “Some Notes on Book of Mormon Names.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 155-160.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: This study considers the Book of Mormon personal names Josh, Nahom, and Alma as test cases for the Book of Mormon as an historically authentic ancient document.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
Book of Mormon Scriptures > 3 Nephi
ID = [4363]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 11579  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
McGuire, Benjamin L. “Josiah’s Reform: An Introduction.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 161-163.
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In 1951 in The Improvement Era, Sidney B. Sperry published a short article titled “Some Problems of Interest Relating to the Brass Plates.” In this article he outlines several problems including issues related to the Pentateuch, Jeremiah’s prophecies, The Book of the Law, and the Brass Plates themselves. In many ways, Sperry laid down a gauntlet that has been taken up many times by LDS scholars looking for answers that help to explain these issues in the Book of Mormon within the context of the best current biblical scholarship.

ID = [4364]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 4718  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
Hamblin, William J. “Vindicating Josiah.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 165-176.
Display Abstract  

For an introduction, see Benjamin L. McGuire, “Josiah’s Reform: An Introduction.”
For a counterpoint, see Kevin Christensen, “Prophets and Kings in Lehi’s Jerusalem and Margaret Barker’s Temple Theology”
Abstract: Margaret Barker has written a number of fascinating books on ancient Israelite and Christian temple theology. One of her main arguments is that the temple reforms of Josiah corrupted the pristine original Israelite temple theology. Josiah’s reforms were therefore, in some sense, an apostasy. According to Barker, early Christianity is based on the pristine, original pre-Josiah form of temple theology. This paper argues that Josiah’s reforms were a necessary correction to contemporary corruption of the Israelite temple rituals and theologies, and that the type of temple apostasy Barker describes is more likely associated with the Hasmoneans.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
ID = [4365]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 24462  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26
Christensen, Kevin. “Prophets and Kings in Lehi’s Jerusalem and Margaret Barker’s Temple Theology.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 4 (2013): 177-193.
Display Abstract  

For an introduction, see Benjamin L. McGuire, “Josiah’s Reform: An Introduction.”
For a counterpoint, see William J. Hamblin, “Vindicating Josiah.”
Abstract: King Josiah’s reign has come under increasing focus for its importance to the formation of the Hebrew Bible, and for its proximity to the ministry of important prophets such as Jeremiah and Lehi. Whereas the canonical accounts and conventional scholarship have seen Josiah portrayed as the ideal king, Margaret Barker argues Josiah’s reform was hostile to the temple. This essay offers a counterpoint to Professor Hamblin’s “Vindicating Josiah” essay, offering arguments that the Book of Mormon and Barker’s views and sources support one another.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Old Testament Scriptures > Jeremiah/Lamentations
ID = [4366]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 29735  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:27

Volume 5 (2013)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Introduction, Volume 5.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 5 (2013): vi-xiv.
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Abstract:  This introduction to Volume 5 considers the modern notion of a cessation of Bible-like divine manifestations and revelations, a belief which Joseph Smith encountered when he told others of the First Vision. This perception of an end to miracles and visions had become common by Joseph’s time, as evidenced by various writers, and continues to the present day. The Latter-day Saints, however, continue to believe in modern-day revelation, which we believe gives us a unique vantage point for the study of the Bible and other scripture, as illustrated in Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture.

ID = [4348]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 13508  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25
McGuire, Benjamin L. “Finding Parallels: Some Cautions and Criticisms, Part One.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 5 (2013): 1-59.
Display Abstract  

Review of Rick Grunder. Mormon Parallels: A Bibliographic Source. Layfayette, New York: Rick Grunder—Books, 2008. 2,088 pp. On CD-ROM. $200.00.
Abstract: Discovering parallels is inherently an act of comparison. Through comparison, parallels have been introduced frequently as proof (or evidence) of different issues within Mormon studies. Despite this frequency, very few investigations provide a theoretical or methodological framework by which the parallels themselves can be evaluated. This problem is not new to the field of Mormon studies but has in the past plagued literary studies more generally. In Part One, this review essay discusses present and past approaches dealing with the ways in which parallels have been used and valued in acts of literary comparison, uncovering the various difficulties associated with unsorted parallels as well as discussing the underlying motivations for these comparisons. In Part Two, a methodological framework is introduced and applied to examples from Grunder’s collection in Mormon Parallels. In using a consistent methodology to value these parallels, this essay suggests a way to address the historical concerns associated with using parallels to explain both texts and Mormonism as an historical religious movement.
.

ID = [4349]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64785  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25
McGuire, Benjamin L. “Finding Parallels: Some Cautions and Criticisms, Part Two.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 5 (2013): 61-104.
Display Abstract  

Review of Rick Grunder. Mormon Parallels: A Bibliographic Source. Layfayette, New York: Rick Grunder—Books, 2008. 2,088 pp. On CD-ROM. $200.00.
Abstract: Discovering parallels is inherently an act of comparison. Through comparison, parallels have been introduced frequently as proof (or evidence) of different issues within Mormon studies. Despite this frequency, very few investigations provide a theoretical or methodological framework by which the parallels themselves can be evaluated. This problem is not new to the field of Mormon studies but has in the past plagued literary studies more generally. In Part One, this review essay discusses present and past approaches dealing with the ways in which parallels have been used and valued in acts of literary comparison, uncovering the various difficulties associated with unsorted parallels as well as discussing the underlying motivations for these comparisons. In Part Two, a methodological framework is introduced and applied to examples from Grunder’s collection in Mormon Parallels. In using a consistent methodology to value these parallels, this essay suggests a way to address the historical concerns associated with using parallels to explain both texts and Mormonism as an historical religious movement.
.

ID = [4350]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64948  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25
Gardner, Brant A. “When Hypotheses Collide: Responding to Lyon and Minson’s ‘When Pages Collide’” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 5 (2013): 105-119.
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Abstract: At the end of 2012, Jack M. Lyon and Kent R. Minson published “When Pages Collide: Dissecting the Words of Mormon.” They suggest that there is textual evidence that supports the idea that Words of Mormon 12-18 is the translation of the end of the previous chapter of Mosiah. The rest of the chapter was lost with the 116 pages, but this text remained because it was physically on the next page, which Joseph had kept with him.
In this paper, the textual information is examined to determine if it supports that hypothesis. The conclusion is that while the hypothesis is possible, the evidence is not conclusive. The question remains open and may ultimately depend upon one’s understanding of the translation process much more than the evidence from the manuscripts.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Words of Mormon
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Mosiah
ID = [4351]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 28545  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 5 (2013). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2013.
ID = [4414]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 7  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30
Nicholson, Roger. “The Spectacles, the Stone, the Hat, and the Book: A Twenty-first Century Believer’s View of the Book of Mormon Translation.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 5 (2013): 121-190.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: This essay seeks to examine the Book of Mormon translation method from the perspective of a regular, nonscholarly, believing member in the twenty-first century, by taking into account both what is learned in Church and what can be learned from historical records that are now easily available. What do we know? What should we know? How can a believing Latter-day Saint reconcile apparently conflicting accounts of the translation process? An examination of the historical sources is used to provide us with a fuller and more complete understanding of the complexity that exists in the early events of the Restoration. These accounts come from both believing and nonbelieving sources, and some skepticism ought to be employed in choosing to accept some of the interpretations offered by some of these sources as fact. However, an examination of these sources provides a larger picture, and the answers to these questions provide an enlightening look into Church history and the evolution of the translation story. This essay focuses primarily on the methods and instruments used in the translation process and how a faithful Latter-day Saint might view these as further evidence of truthfulness of the restored Gospel. .

ID = [4352]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64797  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25
Christensen, Kevin. “Book Review: Temple Mysticism: An Introduction, by Margaret Barker.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 5 (2013): 191-199.
Display Abstract  

Review of Margaret Barker, Temple Mysticism: An Introduction (London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 2011), 181 pp. $18.94.

ID = [4353]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 16543  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25
Bowen, Matthew L. “‘In the Mount of the Lord It Shall Be Seen’ and ‘Provided’: Theophany and Sacrifice as the Etiological Foundation of the Temple in Israelite and Latter-day Saint Tradition.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 5 (2013): 201-223.
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Abstract: For ancient Israelites, the temple was a place where sacrifice and theophany (i.e., seeing God or other heavenly beings) converged. The account of Abraham’s “arrested” sacrifice of Isaac (Genesis 22) and the account of the arrested slaughter of Jerusalem following David’s unauthorized census of Israel (2 Samuel 24; 1 Chronicles 21) served as etiological narratives—explanations of “cause” or “origin”—for the location of the Jerusalem temple and its sacrifices. Wordplay on the verb rāʾâ (to “see”) in these narratives creates an etiological link between the place-names “Jehovah-jireh,” “Moriah” and the threshing floor of Araunah/Ornan, pointing to the future location of the Jerusalem temple as the place of theophany and sacrifice par excellence. Isaac’s arrested sacrifice and the vicarious animal sacrifices of the temple anticipated Jesus’s later “un-arrested” sacrifice since, as Jesus himself stated, “Abraham rejoiced to see my day” (John 8:56). Sacrifice itself was a kind of theophany in which one’s own redemption could be “seen” and the scriptures of the Restoration confirm that Abraham and many others, even “a great many thousand years before” the coming of Christ, “saw” Jesus’s sacrifice and “rejoiced.” Additionally, theophany and sacrifice converge in the canonized revelations regarding the building of the latter-day temple. These temple revelations begin with a promise of theophany, and mandate sacrifice from the Latter-day Saints. In essence, the temple itself was, and is, Christ’s atonement having its intended effect on humanity. .

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Samuel
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Helaman
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Kings/1 & 2 Chronicles
Book of Mormon Scriptures > 3 Nephi
ID = [4354]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,moses,old-test  Size: 56711  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:26

Volume 6 (2013)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Introduction, Volume 6The Modest But Important End of Apologetics.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): vii-xxv.
Display Abstract  

I first became involved in apologetics because I wanted to defend the truth of beliefs that are important to me and to defend the character of leaders for whom I have great respect, even veneration, against attack. I’m offended by falsehoods, prejudice, and injustice. I wanted to help faltering members who were sometimes besieged by intellectual challenges for which they had no adequate response. I also desired to assist interested observers to see sufficient plausibility in the Gospel’s claims that they would be able to make its truth a matter of sincere and receptive prayer. My hope was to clear away obstacles that might obscure their recognition of truth. These continue to be my motivations, and I expect that others who are engaged in apologetics feel much the same way.

ID = [4337]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 34006  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Smith, Robert F. “Adam Miller’s New Hermeneutic?” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): 1-7.
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Review of Adam S. Miller (Collin College, McKinney, TX). Rube Goldberg Machines: Essays in Mormon Theology. Foreword by Richard Lyman Bushman. Draper, UT: Greg Kofford Books, 2012. 162 pp., with bibliography and indexes. $18.95. Paperback and e-book formats.

ID = [4338]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 12506  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Ricks, Stephen D. “A Note on Family Structure in Mosiah 2:5.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): 9-10.
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Mosiah 2:5 provides the reader of the Book of Mormon with new insights about Israelite-Nephite family structure. In a passage set during what John A. Tvedtnes has persuasively argued is the Feast of Tabernacles, we read: “And it came to pass that when they came up to the temple, they pitched their tents round about, every man according to his family, consisting of his wife, and his sons, and his daughters, and their sons and their daughters, from the eldest down to the youngest.”

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Mosiah
ID = [4339]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 3297  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Midgley, Louis C. “Multiple Reformations and a Deeply Divided House.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): 11-15.
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Review of Diarmaid MacCulloch. The Reformation. New York: Viking Penguin, 2004. xxvii + 832 pp. with appendix of texts and index. $35.95 (hardcover). $22.00 (paperback).

ID = [4340]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 8934  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Midgley, Louis C. “Protestant Ecclesiastical Anarchy and Dogmatic Diversity.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): 17-21.
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Review of Mark A. Noll. Protestantism: A Very Short Introduction, New York: Oxford University Press, 2011. xvi + 161 pp., with bibliography of further reading, glossary, index. $11.95 (paperback).

ID = [4341]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 8245  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 6 (2013). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2013.
ID = [4415]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 11  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30
Olsen, Steven L. “Peter’s Tears.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): 23-30.
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Abstract: Peter’s denial of Christ is one of only about two dozen events reported in all four gospels. Three of the accounts conclude by Peter’s weeping. This paper examines the antecedents, possible motivations, and long-term consequences of this crisis in Peter’s life as recorded in the scriptural text and considers its application for all disciples of the Savior.

ID = [4342]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 14027  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Gillum, Gary P. “Written to the Lamanites: Understanding the Book of Mormon through Native Culture and Religion.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): 31-48.
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Abstract: Latter-day Saints have always been encouraged to seek the truth wherever it can be found. With the Book of Mormon being written especially to the Lamanites, we can assume that the more we know about Lamanite and Native American culture, the more we can understand, appreciate and gain insights as we read that inspired scripture. In this article the writer has compared examples from Native American culture and history to what we read in the Book of Mormon and experience as members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Most importantly, as we read through the eyes of a Native American, we can appreciate the divinity and authenticity of the Book of Mormon, since Joseph Smith could not have known Native American culture and history in the way it is described herein.
THE BOOK OF MORMON
AN ACCOUNT WRITTEN BY
THE HAND OF MORMON
UPON PLATES
TAKEN FROM THE PLATES OF NEPHI
Wherefore, it is an abridgment of the record of the people of Nephi, and also of the Lamanites—Written to the Lamanites, who are a remnant of the house of Israel; and also to Jew and Gentile—.

ID = [4343]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 31494  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25
Welch, John W. “Toward a Mormon Jurisprudence.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): 49-84.
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Preface: The following article was published in the Regent University Law Review in the first number of its 2008-2009 volume, pages 79-103. The article is reprinted here by permission without any substantive modifications. Because law reviews are not easily available on the Web or elsewhere to most readers, I am pleased to give wider exposure to this first foray into the idea of a Mormon jurisprudence. Regent University is an Evangelical Christian institution.
This article grew mainly out of a talk that was delivered on February 14, 2004, to the first national meeting of the student chapters of the J. Reuben Clark Law Society, held at Harvard Law School. Four years later, on February 13, 2008, Scott Adams, a third-year member of the law review at Regent University Law School contacted me and said that he was hoping to “put something together on Mormonism and the law,” to see if the law review might publish it. Scott rightly indicated that, according to his research, “no one has ever attempted to tackle the ambitious project of considering Mormonism, in general, and analyzing its potential implications on law (for example, how might an LDS judge see the law, as opposed to a Catholic).” Scott was thinking about writing a paper himself on natural law from an LDS perspective. I responded by suggesting that he contact Cole Durham, Francis Beckwith, and Nate Oman; and I offered to send him a copy of my Harvard speech, expressing interest in publishing that paper as a companion piece with his.
As it would soon turn out, the editor-in-chief and board of the Regent law review were very eager to publish my piece, especially if it could appear with another article presenting an “opposing viewpoint.” They suggested a member of their faculty, and after brief deliberations, all was agreed. In the end, however, no opposing or additional articles were forthcoming, and so this article was published on its own. I thank Scott and his fellow students for their help in checking and enriching the footnotes. They also had hopes that this publication would build good relationships between Evangelicals and future LDS students, which I too hope has occurred.
This essay tries to identify what a “Mormon” jurisprudence would, and would not, look like. Beyond its immediate relevance to legal thought, this article might have broader applications in helping LDS scholars in other disciplines to think about, for example, what a Mormon theory of literary criticism might look like, or what would be distinctive about a Mormon approach to political theory or to any other discipline. I believe that any such Mormon academic approach (1) would be solidly rooted in all LDS scripture, (2) would be inclusivistic, privileging fullness and openness over closure and completeness, and (3) would be fundamentally pluralistic and not reductionistic.
Obviously, this piece is just a beginning. There is much more to be done here. I have continued to work along these lines for the past decade and have published other things growing out of this paper, for example, a talk about rights and duties given at Stanford Law School, published in the Clark Memorandum (Fall, 2010), 26, http://www.jrcls.org/publications/clark_memo/issues/cmF10.pdf, and my Maeser lecture at Brigham Young University, available at http://byustudies.byu.edu/PDFLibrary/50.3WelchThy-08f4ba7e-d3a2-444f-bc8c-0ce842c12fc4.pdf.
I would hope next to articulate the specific implications of these ideas with respect to legal attitudes toward statutory construction, judicial activism, the spirit and letter of the law, justice and mercy, equality and freedom, pacifism and justifiable use of force, corrections and forms of punishment, degrees of fiduciary duties, types of contracts, the foundations of family law, the principles of constitutional law, and many other topics. This development would utilize historical, scriptural, logical, ethical, and other analyses.
Naturally, this article is neither complete nor comprehensive in scope. How could it truly exemplify my theory if it were otherwise? This was all I could cover in a brief presentation even to a group of bright law students gathered on a Valentine’s Day at Harvard. And I probably already had included enough here to bewilder most Baptist readers of the Regent University Law Review who were just then hearing for the first time about Mitt Romney and wondered how a Mormon might approach the law as the president of the United States.
That question, of course, is still up for grabs; and Latter-day Saints are more interested in political and legal issues than ever before. So I hope that readers may find this article still to be stimulating and, as reader Sid Unrau has commented, “well worth reading, contemplating, and building upon, … a valuable start for those who wish to further the subject.”.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
ID = [4344]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,welch  Size: 64843  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25
Foster, Craig L. “Misunderstanding Mormonism in The Mormonizing of America.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): 85-104.
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Abstract: The Mormonizing of America by Stephen Mansfield has been touted as a solid, impartial look at Mormon history and doctrine. Unfortunately, on closer examination, the book is seriously lacking both in substance and impartiality. This article discusses the book’s numerous problems.
Review of Stephen Mansfield. The Mormonizing of America: How the Mormon Religion Became a Dominant Force in Politics, Entertainment, and Pop Culture. Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing, 2012. 264 pp. $22.99.

ID = [4345]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 38185  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25
Smith, Gregory L. “‘Endless Forms Most Beautiful’: The uses and abuses of evolutionary biology in six works.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): 105-163.
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Review of: Michael Dowd. Thank God for Evolution. New York: W. W. Norton, 2004. 336 pp., with index. $13.95. Karl W. Giberson. Saving Darwin: How to be a Christian and Believe in Evolution. New York: HarperCollins, 2008. 239 pp., with index. $9.98. Daniel J. Fairbanks. Relics of Eden: The Powerful Evidence of Evolution in Human DNA. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2007. 281 pp., with index. $15.86. Howard C. Stutz. “Let the Earth Bring Forth”, Evolution and Scripture. Draper, UT: Greg Kofford Books, 2010. 130 pp., with index. $15.95 David C. Stove. Darwinian Fairytales: Selfish Genes, Errors of Heredity, and Other Fables of Evolution. New York: Encounter Books, 1995. 345 pp., with index. $18.95 William A. Dembski. The End of Christianity: Finding a Good God in an Evil World. Nashville, TN: B&H Publishing Group, 2009. 229 pp., with index. $22.99 The position of the Church on the origin of man was published by the First Presidency in 1909 and stated again by a different First Presidency in 1925:
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, basing its belief on divine revelation, ancient and modern, declares man to be the direct and lineal offspring of Deity…. Man is the child of God, formed in the divine image and endowed with divine attributes…
The scriptures tell why man was created, but they do not tell how, though the Lord has promised that he will tell that when he comes again (D&C 101:32–33). In 1931, when there was intense discussion on the issue of organic evolution, the First Presidency of the Church, then consisting of Presidents Heber J. Grant, Anthony W. Ivins, and Charles W. Nibley, addressed all of the General Authorities of the Church on the matter and concluded,Upon the fundamental doctrines of the Church we are all agreed. Our mission is to bear the message of the restored gospel to the world. Leave geology, biology, archaeology, and anthropology, no one of which has to do with the salvation of the souls of mankind, to scientific research, while we magnify our calling in the realm of the Church.… Upon one thing we should all be able to agree, namely, that Presidents Joseph F. Smith, John R. Winder, and Anthon H. Lund were right when they said: “Adam is the primal parent of our race.”
First Presidency Minutes, April 7, 1931 ((Cited in William E. Evenson, “Evolution,” Encyclopedia of Mormonism, Vol. 1, (Macmillan Publishing Company, 1992), 478.)).

ID = [4346]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  d-c,interpreter-journal  Size: 64671  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25
Hales, Brian C. “Stretching to Find the Negative: Gary Bergera’s Review of Joseph Smith’s Polygamy: History and Theology.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 6 (2013): 165-190.
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Abstract: At an author-meets-critic Sunstone Symposium on August 2, 2013, Gary Bergera devoted over 90% of his fifteen-minute review to criticize my 1500+ page, three-volume, Joseph Smith’s Polygamy: History and Theology. This article responds to several of the disagreements outlined by Bergera that on closer inspection appear as straw men. Also addressed are the tired arguments buoyed by carefully selected documentation he advanced supporting that (1) John C. Bennett learned of polygamy from Joseph Smith, (2) the Fanny Alger-Joseph Smith relationship was adultery, and (3) the Prophet practiced sexual polyandry. This article attempts to provide greater balance by including new evidences published for the first time in the three volumes but ignored by Bergera. These new documents and observations empower readers to expand their understanding beyond the timeworn reconstructions referenced in Bergera’s critical review.

ID = [4347]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 49853  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:25

Volume 7 (2013)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Elder Neal A. Maxwell on Consecration, Scholarship, and the Defense of the Kingdom.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 7 (2013): vii-xix.
ID = [4328]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 23921  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Sorensen, A. Don. “An Essay on the One True Morality and the Principle of Freedom.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 7 (2013): 1-47.
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Abstract: The author introduces the subject of the essay based on scripture by observing that one true morality governs the heavens and exists to govern mortality, which contains all possible ways to live in time and eternity and orders them into a hierarchy of rational preferability. In order to live their endless lives with enduring purpose and fullness, humankind must undertake two stages of probationary preparation, one as premortals and one that begins with mortality and concludes in the post-mortal world with the final judgment, in which they come to know for themselves the one morality and accept its ordering of the many never-ending ways of life and hence the ways they have proven themselves willing to receive. With that introduction in mind, in the next two sections of the essay the author explores what some latter-day scripture reveals about the moral facts that make possible knowledge of the one morality, about how humankind determines good from bad ways to live as they undertake the second stage of probationary preparation, about how they can come to a knowledge of the best way of life contained in that morality, and how in the end they have a perfect knowledge of it.
In the final section of the essay, the author investigates how it was that in the premortal world the hosts of heaven, knowing and accepting as they did the one true morality, nevertheless became deeply divided over two incompatible plans of salvation as they prepared for moral life and went to war over them. A major theme of the essay is that the one morality, and every way to live it contains, center on persons becoming and living as agents unto themselves. The upshot is that the principle of freedom, which prescribes the full collective and personal realization of human agency and which belongs to all humankind at every stage of their endless existence, is the fundamental principle of that eternal morality.

ID = [4329]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64639  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Gardner, Brant A. “I Do Not Think That WORD Means What You Think It Means.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 7 (2013): 49-55.
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Review of E. Randolph Richards and Brandon J. O’Brien, Misreading Scripture with Western Eyes: Removing Cultural Blinders to Better Understand the Bible (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Books, 2012), 240 pp. $16.00.

ID = [4330]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 10396  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Skousen, Royal. “The Original Text of the Book of Mormon and its Publication by Yale University Press.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 7 (2013): 57-96.
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An earlier version of the following paper was presented 5 August 2010 at a conference sponsored by FAIR, the Foundation for Apologetic Information and Research (now FairMormon). The text of this paper is copyrighted by Royal Skousen. The photographs that appear in this paper are also protected by copyright. Photographs of the original manuscript are provided courtesy of David Hawkinson and Robert Espinosa and are reproduced here by permission of the Wilford Wood Foundation. Photographs of the printer’s manuscript are provided courtesy of Nevin Skousen and are reproduced here by permission of the Community of Christ. The text of the Yale edition of The Book of Mormon: The Earliest Text (2009) is copyrighted by Royal Skousen; Yale University Press holds the rights to reproduce this text.

ID = [4331]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 55542  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Petersen, Zina Nibley. “Where Shall Wisdom Be Found?” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 7 (2013): 97-112.
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Review of The Mother of the Lord, volume 1: The Lady in the Temple by Margaret Barker, 2012, London: Bloomsbury.

ID = [4332]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 30627  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Christensen, Kevin. “Sophic Box and Mantic Vista: A Review of Deconstructing Mormonism.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 7 (2013): 113-179.
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A review of Deconstructing Mormonism: An Analysis and Assessment of the Mormon Faith (Cranford, N.J, American Atheist Press: 2011) by Thomas Riskas and of Myths, Models and Paradigms: A Comparative Study of Science and Religion (New York, Harper & Row: 1974) by Ian J. Barbour.
Abstract: Riskas’s Desconstructing Mormonism claims that believers are trapped in a box for which the instructions for how to get out are written on the outside of the box. He challenges believers to submit to an outsider test for faith. But how well does Riskas describe the insider test? And is his outsider test, which turns out to be positivism, just a different box with the instructions for how to get out written on its outside? Ian Barbour’s Myths Models and Paradigms provides instructions on how to get out of the positivistic box that Riskas offers, and at the same time provides an alternate outsider test that Mormon readers can use to assess what Alma refers to as “cause to believe.” The important thing, however, is that we are dealing here not with the old donnybrook between science and religion but with the ancient confrontation of Sophic and Mantic. The Sophic is simply the art of solving problems without the aid of any superhuman agency, which the Mantic, on the other hand, is willing to solicit or accept. ((Hugh Nibley, “Paths that Stray: Some Notes on the Sophic and Mantic” in Stephen Ricks, ed., The Ancient State, Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, vol. 10 (Salt Lake City and Provo: Deseret Book and FARMS, 1991), 380-–381.)).

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
ID = [4333]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64597  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 7 (2013). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2013.
ID = [4416]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 9  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30
Smith, Gregory L. “Passing Up The Heavenly Gift (Part One of Two).” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 7 (2013): 181-243.
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Review of Denver C. Snuffer, Jr., Passing the Heavenly Gift, Salt Lake City: Mill Creek Press, 2011. 510 pp., no index. $25.97.

ID = [4334]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64533  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
Smith, Gregory L. “Passing Up The Heavenly Gift (Part Two of Two).” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 7 (2013): 245-321.
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Review of Denver C. Snuffer, Jr., Passing the Heavenly Gift, Salt Lake City: Mill Creek Press, 2011. 510 pp., no index. $25.97.

ID = [4335]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64593  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24
McGuire, Benjamin L. “The Late War Against the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 7 (2013): 323-355.
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Recently, the Exmormon Foundation held their annual conference in Salt Lake City. A presentation by Chris and Duane Johnson proposed a new statistical model for discussing authorship of the Book of Mormon. The study attempts to connect the Book of Mormon to a text published in 1816: The Late War Between the United States and Great Britain. The latter is a history of the war of 1812 deliberately written in a scriptural style. A traditional (non-statistical) comparison between this text and the Book of Mormon was apparently introduced by Rick Grunder in his 2008 bibliography Mormon Parallels. I will discuss only the statistical model presented by the Johnsons here.

ID = [4336]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2013-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64743  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:24

Volume 8 (2014)

Midgley, Louis C. “A Plea for Narrative Theology: Living In and By Stories.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): vii-xxi.
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Abstract: The following are reflections on some of the complicated history, including the abuses, of what is commonly known as theology. The Saints do not “do theology.” Even when we are tempted, we do not reduce the contents or grounds of faith to something conforming to traditional theology. Instead, we tell stories of how and why we came to faith, which are then linked to a network of other stories found in our scriptures, and to a master narrative. We live in and by stories and not by either dogmatic or philosophically grounded systematic theology. Instead, we tend to engage in several strikingly different kinds of endeavors, especially including historical studies, which take the place of (and also clash with) what has traditionally been done under the name theology in its various varieties, confessional or otherwise.

ID = [4310]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 29029  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Spendlove, Loren Blake. “Limhi’s Discourse: Proximity and Distance in Teaching.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 1-6.
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Abstract: The author introduces a syntactic technique known as “enallage”—an intentional substitution of one grammatical form for another. This technique can be used to create distance or proximity between the speaker, the audience, and the message. The author demonstrates how king Limhi skillfully used this technique to teach his people the consequences of sin and the power of deliverance through repentance.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 2 Nephi
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Mosiah
Old Testament Scriptures > 1 & 2 Samuel
ID = [4311]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 8238  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Gee, John. “Of Tolerance and Intolerance.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 7-9.
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Review of D. A. Carson. The Intolerance of Tolerance. Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans, 2012. 186 pp. with indices of names, subjects and scriptures. $24.00 (hardback), $16.00 (paperback).

ID = [4312]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 4051  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Stutz, James. “Can a Man See God? 1 Timothy 6:16 in Light of Ancient and Modern Revelation.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 11-26.
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Abstract: Joseph Smith’s First Vision is a favorite target of critics of the LDS Church. Evangelical critics in particular, such as Matt Slick of the Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry, seek to discredit the First Vision on biblical grounds. This article explores biblical theophanies and argues that Joseph’s vision fits squarely with the experience of ancient prophets, especially those who are given the rare blessing of piercing the veil of light and glory, the Hebrew kabod, that God dwells within.
“I saw a pillar of light exactly over my head, above the brightness of the sun…” –Joseph Smith Jr. ((Joseph Smith—History 1:16.)).

ID = [4313]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 29947  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Nicholson, Roger. “The Cowdery Conundrum: Oliver’s Aborted Attempt to Describe Joseph Smith’s First Vision in 1834 and 1835.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 27-44.
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Abstract: In 1834, Oliver Cowdery began publishing a history of the Church in installments in the pages of the Latter Day Saints’ Messenger and Advocate. The first installment talks of the religious excitement and events that ultimately led to Joseph Smith’s First Vision at age 14. However, in the subsequent installment published two months later, Oliver claims that he made a mistake, correcting Joseph’s age from 14 to 17 and failing to make any direct mention of the First Vision. Oliver instead tells the story of Moroni’s visit, thus making it appear that the religious excitement led to Moroni’s visit.
This curious account has been misunderstood by some to be evidence that the “first” vision that Joseph claimed was actually that of the angel Moroni and that Joseph invented the story of the First Vision of the Father and Son at a later time. However, Joseph wrote an account of his First Vision in 1832 in which he stated that he saw the Lord, and there is substantial evidence that Oliver had this document in his possession at the time that he wrote his history of the Church. This essay demonstrates the correlations between Joseph Smith’s 1832 First Vision account, Oliver’s 1834/1835 account, and Joseph’s 1835 journal entry on the same subject. It is clear that not only did Oliver have Joseph’s history in his possession but that he used Joseph’s 1832 account as a basis for his own account. This essay also shows that Oliver knew of the First Vision and attempted to obliquely refer to the event several times in his second installment before continuing with his narrative of Moroni’s visit.
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Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Moroni
ID = [4314]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 33150  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Midgley, Louis C. “Māori Latter-day Saint Faith: Some Preliminary Remarks.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 45-65.
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Review of Marjorie Newton, Tiki and Temple: The Mormon Mission in New Zealand, 1854–1958 (Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2012), xv + 328 pp. (including a glossary of Māori words, three appendices, bibliography, two maps, twenty-nine illustrations and a photography register, and index). $29.95 (paperback).
Abstract: Marjorie Newton’s widely acclaimed Tiki and Temple ((Marjorie Newton has received several awards for her book, and it has also been reviewed favorably.)) is a history of the first century of Latter-day Saint missionary endeavors in Aotearoa/New Zealand. She tells the remarkable story of what, beginning in 1881, rapidly became essentially a Māori version of the faith of Latter-day Saints. Her fine work sets the stage for a much closer look at the deeper reasons some Māori became faithful Latter-day Saints. It turns out that Māori seers (and hence their own prophetic tradition) was, for them, commensurate with the divine special revelations brought to them by LDS missionaries. Among other things, the arcane lore taught in special schools to an elite group among the Māori is now receiving close attention by Latter-day Saint scholars.

ID = [4315]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 40680  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Nibley, Hugh W. “The Christmas Quest.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 67-70.
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Introduction: The following article from Hugh Nibley, written more than half a century ago, is a timely reminder of the contrast between empty holiday exuberance and the prospect of authentic Christmas cheer that can be provided only by the good news of “a real Savior who has really spoken with men.”
This article originally appeared in Millennial Star 112/1 (January 1950), 4-5. It was reprinted in Eloquent Witness: Nibley on Himself, Others, and the Temple, edited by Stephen D. Ricks. The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley 17 (Salt Lake City, UT: Deseret Book, 2008), 121-124. Footnotes below have been added by Interpreter.

ID = [4316]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,nibley  Size: 7667  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 8 (2014). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2014.
ID = [4417]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 18  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30
Lewis, John S. “The Scale of Creation in Space and Time.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 71-80.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The accounts of creation in Genesis, Moses, and Abraham as well as in higher endowments of knowledge given to the faithful are based on visions in which the seer lacked the vocabulary to describe and the knowledge to interpret what he saw and hence was obliged to record his experiences in the imprecise language available to him. Modern attempts to explain accounts of these visions frequently make use of concepts and terminology that are completely at odds with the understanding of ancient peoples: they project anachronistic concepts that the original seer would not have recognized. This article reviews several aspects of the creation stories in scripture for the purpose of distinguishing anachronistic modern reinterpretations from the content of the original vision.
This essay derives from a presentation made at the 2013 Interpreter Symposium on Science and Religion: Cosmos, Earth, and Man on November 9, 2013. Details on the event, including links to videos, are available at journal.interpreterfoundation.org. An expanded version of the symposium proceedings will be published in hardcopy and digital formats.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
ID = [4317]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  abraham,interpreter-journal,moses,old-test  Size: 17209  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Buchanan, Bryan. “Enoch and Noah on Steroids.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 81-85.
Display Abstract  

Review of Jeffrey M. Bradshaw and David J. Larsen, In God’s Image and Likeness 2: Enoch, Noah, and the Tower of Babel (Salt Lake City, Utah: The Interpreter Foundation and Eborn Books, 2014), 590 pp. (full color interior includes footnotes; endnotes; three excursus sections; annotated bibliography on Enoch and the Flood; comprehensive reference list; thumbnail index of one hundred and eleven illustrations and photographs; and indexes of scriptures referenced, modern prophets quoted, and topics discussed). $49.99 (hardcover).
Reprinted with the kind permission of the Association for Mormon Letters.

ID = [4318]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,moses  Size: 7745  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Smith, Andrew C. “Hagar in LDS Scripture and Thought.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 87-137.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: LDS discourse vis-à-vis Hagar has changed through the years since the foundation of the Church. Her story has been considered and utilized in a number of ways, the most prominent being as a defense of plural marriage. This paper traces the LDS usages of Hagar’s story as well as proposing a new allegorical interpretation of her place within the Abrahamic drama through literary connections in the Hebrew Bible combined with Restoration scripture.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
ID = [4319]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 64995  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Smoot, Stephen O. “Help for the Troubled ‘Young Mormon’” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 139-146.
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Review of Adam S. Miller, Letters to a Young Mormon. Provo, Utah: Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, 2014. 78 pp. $9.95.

ID = [4320]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 13619  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Rappleye, Neal. “‘Until the Heart Betrays’: Life, Letters, and the Stories We Tell.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 147-155.
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Review of Adam S. Miller. Letters to a Young Mormon. Provo, Utah: Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, 2014. 78 pp. $9.95.

ID = [4321]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 15242  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Rappleye, Neal, and Stephen O. Smoot. “Book of Mormon Minimalists and the NHM Inscriptions: A Response to Dan Vogel.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 157-185.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: Biblical “minimalists” have sought to undermine or de-emphasize the significance of the Tel Dan inscription attesting to the existence of the “house of David.” Similarly, those who might be called Book of Mormon “minimalists” such as Dan Vogel have marshaled evidence to try to make the nhm inscriptions from south Arabia, corresponding to the Book of Mormon Nahom, seem as irrelevant as possible. We show why the nhm inscriptions still stand as impressive evidence for the historicity of the Book of Mormon.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
ID = [4322]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 62142  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Smith, Julie M. “A Note on Chiasmus in Abraham 3:22-23.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 187-190.
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Chiasmus, or inverted parallelism, is well-known to most students of Mormon studies; this note explores one instance of it in Abraham 3:22-23.

ID = [4323]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  abraham,interpreter-journal  Size: 4868  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Ricks, Stephen D. “A Nickname and a Slam Dunk: Notes on the Book of Mormon Names Zeezrom and Jershon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 191-194.
Display Abstract  

Even in the Bible, nicknames and dysphemisms—expressions whose connotations may be offensive to the hearer—are not rare and were equally so in other parts of the ancient and early medieval world. In 1 Samuel the ungenerous husband of Abigail rudely refused hospitality to the men of David, greatly angering them. David and his men were so incensed at his offense against the laws of hospitality that they intended to punish him for his boorish behavior before they were dissuaded from their plan by Abigail (1 Samuel 25:1-35). Shortly thereafter the husband died suddenly and mysteriously (1 Samuel 25:36-37). To all subsequent history his name was given as “Nabal,” which means either “churl” or “fool,” a rather harsh nickname that might also shade off to a dysphemism.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
ID = [4324]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 6768  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Smith, Robert F. “‘If There Be Faults, They Be Faults of a Man’” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 195-203.
Display Abstract  

Review of John S. Dinger, ed., Significant Textual Changes in the Book of Mormon: The First Printed Edition Compared to the Manuscripts and to the Subsequent Major LDS English Printed Editions (Salt Lake City: Smith-Pettit Foundation/Signature Books, 2013); with foreword by Stan Larson; 418pp+ xxxvi; hardbound edition limited to 501 copies; ISBN 978-1-56085-233-9.

ID = [4325]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 15123  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Thompson, A. Keith. “Fashion or Proof? A Challenge for Pacific Anthropology.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 205-232.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: This article is a call to Pacific anthropologists to write the story of the origin of mankind in the Pacific a bit larger and perhaps to look scientifically for additional explanations. Is it possible that the early diffusionists may have gotten some things right, albeit for the wrong reasons?.

ID = [4326]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 56598  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23
Skousen, Royal. “A Brief History of Critical Text Work on the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 8 (2014): 233-248.
Display Abstract  

I begin this brief historical account of alternative work on the critical text of the Book of Mormon by including material that I wrote in an original, longer review of John S. Dinger’s Significant Textual Changes in the Book of Mormon (Smith-Pettit Foundation: Salt Lake City, Utah, 2013). The final, shorter review appears in BYU Studies 53:1 (2014). The Interpreter recently published Robert F. Smith’s review of Dinger. In these additional comments, I especially concentrate on work done in the 1970s by Stan Larson on the text of the Book of Mormon. In the latter part of this account, I discuss the more recent work of Shirley Heater in producing The Book of Mormon: Restored Covenant Edition.

ID = [4327]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 27952  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:23

Volume 9 (2014)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Reflections on the Mission of The Interpreter Foundation.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 9 (2014): vii-xx.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: Among the covenant obligations taken upon themselves by faithful Latter-day Saints is the consecration of their talents, gifts, and abilities to the building of the Kingdom of God on the earth. Those who established and lead The Interpreter Foundation see their mission in terms of this covenant. The Foundation’s goal is to foster honest and accessible scholarship in service to the Church and Kingdom of God, scholarship that will be of use and benefit to our fellow Latter-day Saints.

ID = [4303]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 23968  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Bowen, Matthew L. “Founded Upon a Rock: Doctrinal and Temple Implications of Peter’s Surnaming.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 9 (2014): 1-28.
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Abstract: The famous Petros/petra wordplay in Matthew 16:18 does not constitute Jesus’s identification of Peter as the “rock” upon which his church would be built. This wordplay does however identify him with that “rock” or “bedrock” inasmuch as Peter, a small “seer-stone,” had the potential to become like the Savior himself, “the Rock of ages.” One aspect of that “rock” is the revelation that comes through faith that Jesus is the Christ. Other aspects of that same rock are the other principles and ordinances of the gospel, including temple ordinances. The temple, a symbol of the Savior and his body, is a symbol of the eternal family—the “sure house” built upon a rock. As such, the temple is the perfect embodiment of Peter’s labor in the priesthood, against which hell will not prevail.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 3 Nephi
ID = [4304]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 51456  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Gardner, Brant A. “Literacy and Orality in the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 9 (2014): 29-85.
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Abstract: The Book of Mormon is a literate product of a literate culture. It references written texts. Nevertheless, behind the obvious literacy, there are clues to a primary orality in Nephite culture. The instances of text creation and most instances of reading texts suggest that documents were written by and for an elite class who were able to read and write. Even among the elite, reading and writing are best seen as a secondary method of communication to be called upon to archive information, to communicate with future readers (who would have been assumed to be elite and therefore able to read), and to communicate when direct oral communication was not possible (letters and the case of Korihor). As we approach the text, we may gain new insights into the art with which it was constructed by examining it as the literate result of a primarily oral culture.

ID = [4305]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64956  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Spencer, Joseph M. “The Time of Sin.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 9 (2014): 87-110.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: This essay provides a close theological reading of Helaman 13, the first part of the sermon of Samuel the Lamanite. Beginning from the insight that the chapter focuses intensely on time, it develops a theological case for how sin has its own temporality. Sin opens up a disastrous future, deliberately misremembers the past, and complicates the constitution of the present as the past of the future.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Helaman
ID = [4306]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 45919  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Goff, Alan. “The Inevitability of Epistemology in Historiography: Theory, History, and Zombie Mormon History.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 9 (2014): 111-207.
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Abstract: Fundamental changes have occurred in the historical profession over the past thirty years. The central revolutionary change is that workers in the historical profession can no longer ignore theory and philosophy of history. A built-in resistance to theory causes historians to abjure philosophical analysis of their discipline at a time when such analysis is recognized to be indispensable. If one doesn’t have an explicit theory, one will appropriate one uncritically, without the felt need to articulate and defend the theory. The dominant theory in history over the past century has been positivism, a conception of disciplinary work that ruled history and the social sciences during the twentieth century but has been stripped of rhetorical and persuasive power over the past three decades. Although positivism has been overwhelmingly rejected by theoretically informed historians, it continues to dominate among the vast majority of historians, who fear adulterating history with philosophical examination. The most common version of positivism among historians is the assertion that the only evidence from the past that is valid is testimony based on empirical observation. This essay focuses on recent comments by Dan Vogel and Christopher Smith, who deny this dominance of positivism in the historical profession, and in Mormon history in particular, by misunderstanding positivism without even consulting the large scholarly literature on the topic that rebuts their assertions. They make no attempt to engage the sophisticated literature on the transformation in historiography and philosophy of history that has made most of history written to standards of the 1970s obsolete and revealed it as ideologically inspired; while at the same time these historical researchers assert their own objectivity by appealing to a conventional wisdom that is now antiquated. This version of positivism is especially hostile to religious belief in general, and in particular to that embodied in the LDS tradition.

ID = [4307]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64722  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Townsend, Colby J. “The Case for the Documentary Hypothesis, Historical Criticism, and the Latter-day Saints.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 9 (2014): 209-214.
Display Abstract  

Review of David Bokovoy. Authoring the Old Testament: Genesis–Deuteronomy. Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2014). Foreword by John W. Welch. 272pp. Paperback and hardcover. ((I am reviewing an advanced reading copy. Some of the material I review may be updated in the final printed form, with some of my quotations and page numbers of Bokovoy’s book possibly being updated by then.))
Abstract: Bokovoy’s new volume substantiates the claim that faithful Latter-day Saint students of Holy Scripture can apply the knowledge and methods gained through academic studies to the Bible.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
ID = [4308]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 10785  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Bradshaw, Jeffrey M. “Sorting Out the Sources in Scripture.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 9 (2014): 215-272.
Display Abstract  

Review of David E. Bokovoy, Authoring the Old Testament: Genesis-Deuteronomy. Contemporary Studies in Scripture. Salt Lake City, UT: Greg Kofford Books, 2014. 272 pp. $26.95 (paperback); $70.00 (hardcover).
Abstract: To date, LDS scholars have largely ignored the important but rather complex questions about how primary sources may have been authored and combined to form the Bible as we have it today. David Bokovoy’s book, one of a projected series of volumes on the authorship of the Old Testament, is intended to rectify this deficiency, bringing the results of scholarship in Higher Criticism into greater visibility within the LDS community. Though readers may not agree in every respect with the book’s analysis and results, particularly with its characterization of the Books of Moses and Abraham as “inspired pseudepigrapha,” Bokovoy has rendered an important service by applying his considerable expertise in a sincere quest to understand how those who accept Joseph Smith as a prophet of God can derive valuable interpretive lessons from modern scholarship.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Old Testament Scriptures > Exodus
Old Testament Scriptures > Leviticus
Old Testament Scriptures > Numbers
Old Testament Scriptures > Deuteronomy
Book of Moses Topics > Source Criticism and the Documentary Hypothesis
ID = [4309]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  abraham,bradshaw,interpreter-journal,moses,old-test  Size: 64711  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 9 (2014). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2014.
ID = [4418]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 7  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30

Volume 10 (2014)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Some Notes on Faith and Reason.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): vii-xix.
Display Abstract  

Philosophers and theologians, believers and unbelievers, friends to faith and enemies, scientists, historians — these and many others have devoted a very great deal of time and attention for centuries to the relationship between faith and reason.
There is little if any general consensus on the matter, and I have no intention, in just a few pages here, of trying to settle things. I’m inclined, though, to share a few thoughts on the topic from my Latter-day Saint perspective.

ID = [4291]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 22046  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Tvedtnes, John A. “When Was Christ Born?” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 1-33.
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Abstract: Many people still believe that Jesus Christ was born on 25 December, either in 1 bc or ad 1. The December date is certainly incorrect and the year is unlikely.Lift up your head and be of good cheer; for behold, the time is at hand, and on this night shall the sign be given, and on the morrow come I into the world, to show unto the world that I will fulfil all that which I have caused to be spoken by the mouth of my holy prophets. Behold, I come unto my own, to fulfil all things which I have made known unto the children of men from the foundation of the world, and to do the will, both of the Father and of the Son—of the Father because of me, and of the Son because of my flesh. And behold, the time is at hand, and this night shall the sign be given. (3 Nephi 1:13–14).

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 3 Nephi
ID = [4292]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64815  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Skousen, Royal. “Another Account of Mary Whitmer’s Viewing of the Golden Plates.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 35-44.
Display Abstract  

Carl T. Cox has graciously provided me with a new account of Moroni showing the Book of Mormon plates to Mary Whitmer (1778-1856), wife of Peter Whitmer Senior. Mary was the mother of five sons who were witnesses to the golden plates: David Whitmer, one of the three witnesses; and Christian Whitmer, Jacob Whitmer, John Whitmer, and Peter Whitmer Junior, four of the eight witnesses.
For a long time we have known that Mary Whitmer was also shown the plates. These accounts are familiar and derive from David Whitmer and John C. Whitmer (the son of John Whitmer). For comparison’s sake, I provide here two versions of their accounts (in each case, I have added some paragraphing).

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Jacob
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Moroni
ID = [4293]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 13283  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Foster, Craig L. “Separated but not Divorced: The LDS Church’s Uncomfortable Relationship with its Polygamous Past.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 45-76.
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Abstract: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’s uncomfortable relationship with its polygamous history is somewhat like an awkward marriage separation. This is, in part, because of the fitful, painful cessation of plural marriage and the ever present reminders of its complicated past. This essay looks at examples of members’ expression of discomfort over a polygamous heritage and concludes with suggestions of possible pathways to a more comfortable reconciliation.

ID = [4294]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 63874  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Hales, Brian C. “Dissenters: Portraying the Church as Wrong So They can be Right Without It.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 77-121.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: This essay addresses the reasons many persons have left The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In particular, there are those who publicly assert the Church is not led by inspired leaders so they can feel at peace about their decision to leave it. One common argument used to justify their estrangement is the “Samuel Principle,” which ostensibly would require God to allow his followers on earth to go astray if they chose any level of unrighteousness. Problems with this interpretation are presented including examples from religious history that show that God’s primary pattern has been to call his errant followers to repentance by raising up righteous leaders to guide them. Also explored are the common historical events that dissenters often allege have caused the Church to apostatize. The notion that the Church and the “Priesthood” could be separate entities is examined as well. The observation that Church leaders continue to receive divine communication in order to fulfill numerous prophecies and that a significant number of completely devout Latter-day Saints have always existed within the Church, obviating the need for any dissenting movement, is discussed. In addition, several common scriptural proof-texts employed by some dissenters and their ultimate condition of apostasy are analyzed.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 2 Nephi
Book of Mormon Scriptures > 3 Nephi
ID = [4295]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64770  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Rappleye, Neal. “A Scientist Looks at Book of Mormon Anachronisms.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 123-131.
Display Abstract  

Review of Wade E. Miller, Science and the Book of Mormon: Cureloms, Cumoms, Horses & More (Laguna Niguel, California: KCT & Associates, 2010). 106 pages + viii, including two appendices and references cited, no index.
Abstract: Anachronisms, or out of place items, have long been a subject of controversy with the Book of Mormon. Several Latter-day Saints over the years have attempted to examine them. Dr. Wade E. Miller, as a paleontologist and geologist, offers a some new insights on this old question, especially regarding animals mentioned in the Book of Mormon, including a report on some preliminary research which might completely change the pre-Columbian picture for horses in America. Overall, this is an indispensable resource on Book of Mormon anachronisms.

ID = [4296]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 16590  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Birch, A. Jane. “Questioning the Comma in Verse 13 of the Word of Wisdom.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 133-149.
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Abstract: The 1921 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants included an additional comma, which was inserted after the word “used” in D&C 89:13: “And it is pleasing unto me that they should not be used, only in times of winter, or of cold, or famine.” Later authors have speculated that the addition of the comma was a mistake that fundamentally changed the meaning of the verse. This article examines this “errant comma theory” and demonstrates why this particular interpretation of D&C 89:13 is without merit.

ID = [4297]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  d-c,interpreter-journal  Size: 27285  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Bowen, Matthew L. “‘And There Wrestled a Man with Him’ (Genesis 32:24): Enos’s Adaptations of the Onomastic Wordplay of Genesis.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 151-160.
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Abstract: In this brief note, I will suggest several instances in which the Book of Mormon prophet Enos utilizes wordplay on his own name, the name of his father “Jacob,” the place name “Peniel,” and Jacob’s new name “Israel” in order to connect his experiences to those of his ancestor Jacob in Genesis 32-33, thus infusing them with greater meaning. Familiarity with Jacob and Esau’s conciliatory “embrace” in Genesis 33 is essential to understanding how Enos views the atonement of Christ and the ultimate realization of its blessings in his life.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Jacob
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Enos
ID = [4298]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 17781  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Anderson, Rick. “Mormonism and Intellectual Freedom.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 161-173.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: To many outside the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (and to some of its members), the Church’s teachings and practices appear not only socially and experientially constraining, but intellectually restrictive as well, given its centralized system of doctrinal boundary maintenance and its history of sometimes sanctioning members who publicly dissent from its teachings. Do these practices amount to a constraint of intellectual freedom? This essay argues that they do not, and offers several possible explanations for the commonly-asserted position that they do.

ID = [4299]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 23923  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Christensen, Kevin. “Eye of the Beholder, Law of the Harvest: Observations on the Inevitable Consequences of the Different Investigative Approaches of Jeremy Runnells and Jeff Lindsay.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 175-238.
Display Abstract  

Review of “Letter to a CES Director: Why I Lost My Testimony,” Jeremy Runnells, April 2013, Updated February 23, 2014. 83 pages. http://cesletter.com/Letter-to-a-CES-Director.pdf.
Abstract: In his Letter to a CES Director, Jeremy Runnells explains how a year of obsessive investigation brought about the loss of his testimony. In an LDS FAQ, LDS blogger Jeff Lindsay deals with all of the same questions, and has done so at least twenty years and has not only an intact testimony, but boundless enthusiasm. What makes the difference? In the parable of the Sower, Jesus explained that the same seeds (words) can generate completely different harvests, ranging from nothing to a hundred-fold increase, all depending on the different soil and nurture. This essay looks at how different expectations and inquiries for translation, prophets, key scriptural passages on representative issues can lead to very different outcomes for investigators.

ID = [4300]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64822  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 10 (2014). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2014.
ID = [4419]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 12  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30
Larsen, Val. “Restoration: A Theological Poem in the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 239-256.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The distinctive Mormon conception of God makes possible a logically coherent reconciliation of the facially incompatible laws of justice and mercy. The Book of Mormon prophet Alma clearly explains how these two great laws may be reconciled through the atonement and repentance that the atonement makes possible. Alma artfully illustrates the relationship between justice and mercy in a carefully crafted theological poem.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
ID = [4301]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 35884  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22
Halverson, Taylor. “Reading the Scriptures Geographically: Some Tools and Insights.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 10 (2014): 257-258.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The purpose of this article is to provide several examples of how meaning, understanding, and interpretation of scriptures may be enhanced when scriptures are read in their geographical context.  Many scholarly articles seek exclusively to break new ground in meaning and meaning-making, to essentially produce new knowledge.  This article hopes to break new ground both in terms of new knowledge (insights) as well as in the pragmatics of giving readers additional tools and opportunities for exploring the scriptures in fresh ways.  In particular, this article will also highlight several free geographical tools that can improve one’s learning with the scriptures, with particular focus on Google Earth and the BYU scriptures.byu.edu/mapscrip tool (hereafter referred to as Google Earth Bible or GEB).  The hope is that this article will, through the tools discussed, create opportunities for others to create new knowledge for themselves through scripture study.

ID = [4302]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 40580  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:22

Volume 11 (2014)

Peterson, Daniel C. “The Sibling Scandals of the Resurrection.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 11 (2014): vii-xxix.
Display Abstract  

I’ve recently picked Stephen T. Davis’s Risen Indeed: Making Sense of the Resurrection up again. It’s an impressive book that had a pivotal effect on my thinking when it first appeared. Davis, the Russell K. Pitzer Professor of Philosophy at Claremont McKenna College in California, argues that “Christians are within their intellectual rights in believing that Jesus was raised from the dead.” “The thesis of the book,” he explains, “is that the two central Christian resurrection claims — namely, that Jesus was bodily raised from the dead and that we will all be raised from the dead — are defensible claims.”

ID = [4284]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 42506  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Birch, A. Jane. “Getting into the Meat of the Word of Wisdom.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 11 (2014): 1-36.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: In verse 13 of the Word of Wisdom, the Lord tells us, “it is pleasing unto me that they [flesh of beasts and fowls of the air] should not be used, only in times of winter, or of cold, or famine” (D&C 89:13). Judging from the variety of interpretations this single verse has inspired, it would appear to be deeply enigmatic. Interestingly, most interpretations have been put forward with little supporting evidence. This article is the first comprehensive analysis of the diverse explanations for D&C 89:13 that have been suggested since 1833. In this article, I attempt to analyze these various interpretations in light of the available evidence.

ID = [4285]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  d-c,interpreter-journal  Size: 64915  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Rappleye, Neal. “‘War of Words and Tumult of Opinions’: The Battle for Joseph Smith’s Words in Book of Mormon Geography.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 11 (2014): 37-95.
Display Abstract  

Review of John L. Lund. Joseph Smith and the Geography of the Book of Mormon. The Communications Company, 2012. 209 pp. + xviii, including index.In the midst of this war of words and tumult of opinions, I often said to myself: What is to be done? Who of all these parties are right; or, are they all wrong together? If any one of them be right, which is it, and how shall I know it?
–Joseph Smith Jr.
.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
ID = [4286]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64694  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Spendlove, Loren Blake. “Understanding Nephi with the Help of Noah Webster.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 11 (2014): 97-159.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: Dictionaries, especially Noah Webster’s 1828 American Dictionary of the English Language, can be useful and informative resources to help us better understand the language of the Book of Mormon. This article compares definitions of words and phrases found in the book of 1 Nephi, using Webster’s 1828 dictionary and the New Oxford American Dictionary as references. By comparing these two dictionaries, we can see how word usage and meanings have changed since the original publication of the Book of Mormon in 1830. We can also gain a greater appreciation of the text of the Book of Mormon in a way that its first readers probably understood it.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
ID = [4287]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64968  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Skousen, Royal. “Changes in The Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 11 (2014): 161-176.
Display Abstract  

Author’s preface: I originally gave this presentation in August 2002 at the LDS FAIR conference held in Orem, Utah. A transcript of this paper, based on the 2002 version, appears online at www.fairmormon.org. Since then I have published updated versions of the first half of that original presentation. The most recent history of the Book of Mormon critical text project can be found in my article “The Original Text of the Book of Mormon and its Publication by Yale University Press”, published in 2013 in Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, volume 7, pages 57-96. Until now, I have not published a printed version of the second half of my original presentation, “Changes in the Book of Mormon”.
Abstract: In that part of the original article (here presented with some minor editing), I first describe the different kinds of changes that have occurred in the Book of Mormon text over the years and provide a fairly accurate number for how many places the text shows textual variation. Then I turn to five changes in the text (“the five chestnuts”) that critics of the Book of Mormon continually refer to. At the conclusion of the original article, I provide some specific numbers for the different types of changes in the history of the Book of Mormon text, including the number of changes introduced in The Book of Mormon: The Earliest Text, the definitive scholarly edition of the Book of Mormon, published in 2009 by Yale University Press.

ID = [4288]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 27911  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Foster, Craig L., and Brian C. Hales. “Big Trouble in River City: American Crucifixion and the Defaming of Joseph Smith.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 11 (2014): 177-207.
Display Abstract  

Review of Alex Beam. American Crucifixion: The Murder of Joseph Smith and the Fate of the Mormon Church. PublicAffairs, 2014. 352 pp.
Abstract: On April 22, 2014, PublicAffairs, an imprint of a national publisher Persues Books Group, released American Crucifixion: The Murder of Joseph Smith and the Fate of the Mormon Church, authored by Alex Beam. Beam, who openly declared he entered the project without personal biases against Joseph Smith or the Latter-day Saints, spent a couple of years researching his work, which he declares to be “popular non-fiction” and therefore historically accurate. This article challenges both of these assertions, showing that Beam was highly prejudiced against the Church prior to investigating and writing about events leading up to the martyrdom. In addition, Beam’s lack of training as an historian is clearly manifested in gross lapses in methodology, documentation, and synthesis of his interpretation. Several key sections of his book are so poorly constructed from an evidentiary standpoint that the book cannot be considered useful except, perhaps, as well-composed historical fiction.

ID = [4289]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 61156  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Carmack, Stanford A. “A Look at Some ‘Nonstandard’ Book of Mormon Grammar.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 11 (2014): 209-262.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: Much of the earliest Book of Mormon language which has been regarded as nonstandard through the years is not. Furthermore, when 150 years’ worth of emendations are stripped away,
the grammar presents extensive evidence of its Early Modern English character, independent in many cases from the King James Bible. This paper argues that this character stems from its divine translation.

ID = [4290]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64984  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:21
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 11 (2014). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2014.
ID = [4420]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 7  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30

Volume 12 (2014)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Reason, Experience, and the Existence of God.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): vii-xxii.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: Both reason and experience are essential to religious life, which should be neither completely irrational nor entirely cerebral. But surely, of the two, the experience of direct and convincing revelation would and should trump academic debate, and most obviously so for its recipient. The Interpreter Foundation was established in the conviction that reasoned discussion and analysis necessarily have a place in faithful discipleship, but also in the confidence that divine revelation has genuinely occurred. The role of reason, accordingly, is a helpful one. It serves an important ancillary function. However, it does not supplant experience with God and the divine and must never imagine that it can. Academic scholarship can refine and clarify ideas, correct assumptions, defend truth claims, generate insights, and deepen understanding, but, while human inquiry sometimes creates openings for revelation, it will never replace direct divine communication. Interpreter knows its place.

ID = [4273]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 29929  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Gardner, Brant A. “The Book with the Unintentionally Self-Referential Title.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): 1-32.
Display Abstract  

Review of Earl M. Wunderli, An Imperfect Book: What the Book of Mormon Tells Us about Itself (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 2013), 328pp + Appendices, Maps, and Index.
Earl M. Wunderli has written a book that works through the reasons he fell out of belief in the Book of Mormon. These are combined with issues that he has added to his original reasons. His presentation is clearly intended to suggest that what he found compelling will also be compelling to other readers. Should it? This review looks at how his arguments are constructed: his methodology, the logic of the analysis, and the way he uses his sources. Although he argues that it is the Book of Mormon that is the imperfect book, his construction of the arguments makes that designation ironic.

ID = [4274]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 63372  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Rees, Robert A. “Inattentional Blindness: Seeing and Not Seeing The Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): 33-47.
Display Abstract  

Review of Earl M. Wunderli, An Imperfect Book: What the Book of Mormon Tells Us about Itself (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 2013), 328pp + Appendices, Maps, and Index.
Earl Wunderli, an attorney who has made a lifelong study of the Book of Mormon, concludes that the book is a product of Joseph Smith’s mind and imagination. In doing so, Wunderli marshals evidence and presents his argument as if he were an attorney defending a client in court. Unfortunately, Wunderli’s case suffers from the same weaknesses and limitations of other naturalist criticism in that it exaggerates Joseph Smith’s intellectual and cultural background and compositional skills while ignoring the Book of Mormon’s deep structure, narrative complexity, and often intricate rhetorical patterns.

ID = [4275]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 27843  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
McGuire, Benjamin L. “Nephi: A Postmodernist Reading.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): 49-78.
Display Abstract  

Authors inevitably make assumptions about their readers as they write. Readers likewise make assumptions about authors and their intentions as they read. Using a postmodern framing, this essay illustrates how a close reading of the text of 1 and 2 Nephi can offer insight into the writing strategies of its author. This reading reveals how Nephi differentiates between his writing as an expression of his own intentions and desires, and the text as the product of divine instruction written for a “purpose I know not.” In order to help his audience understand the text in this context, Nephi as the author interacts with his audience through his rhetorical strategy, pointing towards his own intentions, and offering reading strategies to help them discover God’s purposes in the text.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
Book of Mormon Scriptures > 2 Nephi
ID = [4276]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 53940  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Wright, Mark Alan. “Axes Mundi: Ritual Complexes in Mesoamerica and the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): 79-96.
Display Abstract  

Places are made sacred through manifestations of the divine or ritual activity. The occurrence of a theophany or hierophany or the performance of particular rituals can conceptually transform a place into an axis mundi, or the center of the world. A variety of such axes mundi are known from the archaeological record of Mesoamerica and the text of the Book of Mormon. I compare and contrast several distinctive types of such ritual complexes from Mesoamerica and the Book of Mormon and argue that they served functionally and ideologically similar purposes.

ID = [4277]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 31291  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Midgley, Louis C. “The Māori Stairway to Heaven.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): 97-110.
Display Abstract  

A review of Jason Hartley. Ngā Mahi: The Things We Need to Do; The Pathway of the Stars. n.p.: Xlibris, 2013. 264 pp., no index. $23.00AUD (softcover).
Jason Hartley’s book manifests a passion for alleviating the problem of Māori surging into the prisons of Aotearoa/New Zealand
by restoring their old, traditional religious ethos and the social control that hinges on the recovery of the old belief that they are potentially noble children of God. In setting out his own disappointing discovery of the roots of both a growing problem and what he believes is the solution, he describes how he came to learn the arcane moral teachings, or old stories, that once buttressed Māori social order. For Latter-day Saints, he also demonstrates that for some Māori, despite much degradation, the Heavens are still open, just as they were when Latter-day Saint missionaries first encountered a people prepared for them and their message by their own seers, thus also implicitly challenging recent efforts to downplay or explain away the old stories as mere embellishments, wishful thinking, or an implausible founding mythology.

ID = [4278]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 27515  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Bowen, Matthew L. “‘What Thank They the Jews’? (2 Nephi 29:4): A Note on the Name ‘Judah’ and Antisemitism.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): 111-125.
Display Abstract  

The Hebrew Bible explains the meaning of the personal and tribal name “Judah”—from which the term “Jews” derives—in terms of “praising” or “thanking” (*ydy/ydh). In other words, the “Jews” are those who are to be “praised out of a feeling of gratitude.” This has important implications for the Lord’s words to Nephi regarding Gentile ingratitude and antisemitism: “And what thank they the Jews for the Bible which they receive from them?” (2 Nephi 29:4). Gentile Christian antisemitism, like the concomitant doctrine of supersessionism, can be traced (in part) to widespread misunderstanding and misapplication of Paul’s words regarding Jews and “praise” (Romans 2:28-29). Moreover, the strongest scriptural warnings against antisemitism are to be found in the Book of Mormon, which also offers the reassurance that the Jews are still “mine ancient covenant people” (2 Nephi 29:4-5) and testifies of the Lord’s love and special concern for them.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 2 Nephi
ID = [4279]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 30998  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Stirling, Mack C. “Job: An LDS Reading.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): 127-181.
Display Abstract  

Editor’s Note: This article is drawn from a chapter in a volume edited by David R. Seely and William J. Hamblin entitled Temple Insights: Proceedings of the Interpreter Matthew B. Brown Memorial Conference “The Temple on Mount Zion,” 22 September 2012 (Provo, UT: The Interpreter Foundation/Eborn Books, 2014). The book will be available online (e.g., Amazon, FairMormon Bookstore) and in selected bookstores in October 2014.
In response to questions arising within God, Job, described as blameless and upright, is thrust from idyllic circumstances into a dark realm of bitter experience. Three “friends” unwittingly press Satan’s case, attempting to convince Job to admit guilt. Job, however, holds on, searching for God’s face and progressing toward a transformed understanding of God and man, which is brought to strongest expression in four great revelatory insights received by Job. Finally, Job commits himself to God and man with self-imprecating oaths. After withstanding a final challenge from Elihu/Satan, Job speaks with God at the veil and enters God’s presence. Many points of contact with the temple support the thesis that the book of Job is a literary analogue of the endowment ritual.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Job
ID = [4280]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 64422  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Hales, Brian C., and Gregory L. Smith. “A Response to Grant Palmer’s ‘Sexual Allegations against Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Polygamy in Nauvoo’” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): 183-236.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: Grant H. Palmer, former LDS seminary instructor turned critic, has recently posted an essay, “Sexual Allegations against Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Polygamy in Nauvoo,” on MormonThink.com. In it, Palmer isolates ten interactions between women and Joseph Smith that Palmer alleges were inappropriate and, “have at least some plausibility of being true.” In this paper, Palmer’s analysis of these ten interactions is reviewed, revealing how poorly Palmer has represented the historical data by advancing factual inaccuracies, quoting sources without establishing their credibility, ignoring contradictory evidences, and manifesting superficial research techniques that fail to account for the latest scholarship on the topics he is discussing. Other accusations put forth by Palmer are also evaluated for correctness, showing, once again, his propensity for inadequate scholarship.

ID = [4281]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64397  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Perego, Ugo A., and Jayne E. Ekins. “Is Decrypting the Genetic Legacy of America’s Indigenous Populations Key to the Historicity of the Book of Mormon?” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): 237-279.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The Book of Mormon claims to be an ancient record containing a summary of a now-disappeared civilization that once lived in the American continent but originated in the Middle East. DNA studies focusing on the ancient migration of world populations support a North-East Asian origin of modern Native American populations arriving through the now-submerged land-bridge that once connected Siberia to Alaska during the last Ice Age, approximately 15,000 years ago. The apparent discrepancy between the Book of Mormon narrative and the published genetic data must be addressed in lieu of generally accepted population genetic principles that are efficient in large-scale population studies, but are somewhat weak and limitative in detecting genetic signals from the introgression of DNA by small groups of outsiders into a large, and well-established population. Therefore, while DNA can definitely provide clues about the ancient history of a people or civilization, it fails to provide conclusive proofs to support or dismiss the Book of Mormon as a true historical narrative.

ID = [4282]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 65290  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Zinner, Samuel. “‘Zion’ and ‘Jerusalem’ as Lady Wisdom in Moses 7 and Nephi’s Tree of Life Vision.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 12 (2014): 281-323.
Display Abstract  

Editor’s Note: This article is drawn from a chapter in Samuel Zinner’s new book entitled Textual and Comparative Explorations in 1 and 2 Enoch (Provo, UT: The Interpreter Foundation/Eborn Books, 2014). The book is now available online for purchase (e.g., Amazon, FairMormon Bookstore) and will be available in selected bookstores in October 2014. The other new temple books from Interpreter are also now available for purchase. Click here for more details.
The essay traces lines of continuity between ancient middle eastern traditions of Asherah in her various later Jewish, Christian, and Mormon forms. Especially relevant in Jewish texts are Lady Wisdom (Proverbs 8; Sirach 24; Baruch 3-4), Daughter of Zion (Lamentations; Isaiah); Lady Zion and Mother Jerusalem (4 Ezra), Binah in kabbalah etc. The divine feminine in the Jewish-Christian texts Odes of Solomon 19 and Shepherd of Hermas is examined, as well as in Pauline Christian texts, namely, the Letter to the Galatians and the writings of Irenaeus (Against Heresies and Apostolic Preaching). Dependence of Hermas on the Parables of Enoch is documented. The essay identifies parallels between some of the above ancient sources and traditions about Zion and other forms of the feminine divine in 19th century America, specifically in the Mormon scriptures (Moses 7 and Nephi 11). While recognizing the corporate nature of the Enochic city of Zion in Moses 7, the essay argues that this Zion also parallels the hypostatic Lady Zion of Jewish canonical and extracanonical scriptures, especially 4 Ezra. The essay also points how the indigenous trope of Mother Earth parallels forms of the divine feminine stretching from the ancient middle eastern Asherah, the Jewish Lady Wisdom and Shekhinah, the Christian Holy Spirit, to the Mormon Enochic Zion.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 6:13–7 — Enoch
ID = [4283]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,moses  Size: 64317  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:20
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 12 (2014). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2014.
ID = [4421]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 11  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30

Volume 13 (2015)

Peterson, Daniel C. “An Exhortation to Study God’s Two ‘Books’” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 13 (2015): vii-xv.
Display Abstract  

From the birth of modern science at the end of the sixteenth century, Galileo famously believed that God had written two books — the scriptures and the Book of Nature. The scriptures, he contended, should be interpreted by scholars and theologians, whereas the Book of Nature was the province of scientists.

ID = [4263]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 14749  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Skousen, Royal. “Tyndale Versus More in the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 13 (2015): 1-8.
Display Abstract  

In 1526 William Tyndale’s English-language The New Testament started showing up in England, printed in the Low Lands and smuggled into England because it was an illegal book. It represented an unapproved translation of the scriptures into the English language. In theory, a translation would have been allowed if the Church had approved it in advance. In reality, the Church was not interested in any translation of the scriptures since that would allow lay readers to interpret the scriptures on their own and to come to different conclusions regarding Church practices and doctrine. Moreover, scripture formed a fundamental role in the rise of the Protestant Reformation and, in particular, Lutheranism, which King Henry VIII had officially opposed, in the governing of his realm and in his own writings in defense of the Catholic Church (for which the Church had honored him with the title of Defender of the Faith).

ID = [4264]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 10749  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Christensen, Kevin. “Profound Depth in a Slender Book.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 13 (2015): 9-12.
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A review of Blake T. Ostler, Fire on the Horizon: A Meditation on the Endowment and Love of Atonement. Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2013, 119 pages + subject and scripture indices.

ID = [4265]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 6895  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Strathearn, Gaye. “Looking at the Endowment and Atonement Through a Different Lens.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 13 (2015): 13-25.
Display Abstract  

A review of Blake T. Ostler, Fire on the Horizon: A Meditation on the Endowment and Love of Atonement. Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2013, 119 pages + subject and scripture indices.

ID = [4266]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 24696  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Bowen, Matthew L. “‘Most Desirable Above All Things’: Onomastic Play on Mary and Mormon in the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 13 (2015): 27-61.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The names Mary and Mormon most plausibly derive from the Egyptian word mr(i), “love, desire, [or] wish.” Mary denotes “beloved [i.e., of deity]” and is thus conceptually connected with divine love, while Mormon evidently denotes “desire/love is enduring.” The text of the Book of Mormon manifests authorial awareness of the meanings of both names, playing on them in multiple instances. Upon seeing Mary (“the mother of God,” 1 Nephi 11:18, critical text) bearing the infant Messiah in her arms in vision, Nephi, who already knew that God “loveth his children,” came to understand that the meaning of the fruit-bearing tree of life “is the love of God, which sheddeth itself abroad in the hearts of the children of men; wherefore it is the most desirable above all things” (1 Nephi 11:17-25). Later, Alma the Elder and his people entered into a covenant and formed a church based on “love” and “good desires” (Mosiah 18:21, 28), a covenant directly tied to the waters of Mormon: Behold here are the waters of Mormon … and now, as ye are desirous to come into the fold of God … if this be the desire of your hearts, what have you against being baptized …?”; “they clapped their hands for joy and exclaimed: This is the desire of our hearts” (Mosiah 18:8-11). Alma the Younger later recalled the “song of redeeming love” that his father and others had sung at the waters of Mormon (Alma 5:3-9, 26; see Mosiah 18:30). Our editor, Mormon, who was himself named after the land of Mormon and its waters (3 Nephi 5:12), repeatedly spoke of charity as “everlasting love” or the “pure love of Christ [that] endureth forever” (Moroni 7:47-48; 8:16-17; 26). All of this has implications for Latter-day Saints or “Mormons” who, as children of the covenant, must endure to the end in Christlike “love” as Mormon and Moroni did, particularly in days of diminishing faith, faithfulness, and love (see, e.g., Mormon 3:12; contrast Moroni 9:5).

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Mosiah
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Moroni
ID = [4267]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 63213  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Smith, Gregory L. “Cracking the Book of Mormon’s ‘Secret Combinations’?” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 13 (2014): 63-109.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The Book of Mormon has been explained by some as a product of Joseph Smith’s 19th century environment. Advocates of this thesis have argued that the phrase secret combinations is a reference to Freemasonry, and reflects Joseph’s preoccupation with this fraternity during the Book of Mormon’s composition in 1828–29. It is claimed that this phrase is rarely, if ever, used in a non-Masonic context during 1828–29, and that a type of “semantic narrowing” occurred which restricted the term to Freemasonry. Past studies have found a few counter-examples, which are reviewed, but none from during the precise years of interest. This study describes many newly-identified counterexamples, including: anti-Masonic authors who use the term to refer to non-Masonic groups, books translated in the United States, legislature bills, grand jury instructions, and works which so characterize slave rebellions, various historical groups and movements, Biblical figures, and religious groups. These examples are found before, during, and after the critical 1828–29 period. Examples from 1832 onward likewise demonstrate that no semantic shift occurred which restricted secret combination to Masonry. This element of the environmental hypothesis has now been robustly disproven.

ID = [4268]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2014-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64677  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Wright, Mark Alan. “Heartland as Hinterland: The Mesoamerican Core and North American Periphery of Book of Mormon Geography.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 13 (2015): 111-129.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The best available evidence for the Book of Mormon continues to support a limited Mesoamerican model. However, Alma 63 indicates that there was a massive northward migration in the mid-first century bc. I argue that these north-bound immigrants spread out over the centuries and established settlements that were geographically distant from the core Nephite area, far beyond the scope of the text of the Book of Mormon. I introduce the Hinterland Hypothesis and argue that it can harmonize the Mesoamerican evidence for the Book of Mormon with Joseph Smith’s statements concerning Nephite and Lamanite material culture in North America. Archaeological and anthropological evidence is used to demonstrate that migrations and cultural influence did in fact spread northward from Mesoamerica into North America in pre-Columbian times.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
ID = [4269]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 39030  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Huston, Jamie J. “The Integration of Temples and Families: A Latter-day Saint Structure for the Jacob Cycle.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 13 (2015): 131-167.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: Scholars from many religious backgrounds — including Latter-day Saints — have noted both temple themes and parallel structures in the Jacob Cycle (Genesis 28-35). The present paper surveys that body of work and then offers a new structural understanding of the text, one that is uniquely LDS. This interpretation focuses on the entwining of temple and family themes in the narrative, showing how the form of the text uses each to support the other.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
ID = [4270]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 60315  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Card, Orson Scott. “Christmas Is About a Baby.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 13 (2015): 169-173.
Display Abstract  

When I was a child, I completely understood all the Santa Claus stuff. No great moment of disillusionment, because my parents were wise enough to let us help create the illusion for the younger kids as soon as we were old enough.

ID = [4271]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 8894  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Carmack, Stanford A. “What Command Syntax Tells Us About Book of Mormon Authorship.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 13 (2015): 175-217.
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Abstract: The variety of command syntax found in the Book of Mormon is very different from what is seen in the King James Bible. Yet it is sophisticated and principled, evincing Early Modern English linguistic competence. Interestingly, the syntactic match between the 1829 text and a prominent text from the late 15th century is surprisingly good. All the evidence indicates that Joseph Smith would not have produced the structures found in the text using the King James Bible as a model, nor from his own language. The overall usage profile of command syntax seen in the Book of Mormon strongly supports the view that the Lord revealed specific words to Joseph Smith, not simply ideas.

ID = [4272]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 65264  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 13 (2015). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2015.
ID = [4422]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 10  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30

Volume 14 (2015)

Boyce, Duane. “Sustaining the Brethren.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): vii-xxxii.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: Believing Latter-day Saints hold different views about what it means to sustain the presiding Brethren of the Church. In this article, I outline some considerations that might be kept in mind as members of the Church evaluate their views on this vital topic and the Lord’s admonition to sustain the Brethren by their faith, prayers, and actions.

ID = [4250]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 64580  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Thompson, A. Keith. “Who Was Sherem?” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 1-15.
Display Abstract  Display Keywords

Abstract: The Book of Mormon’s first anti-Christ, Sherem, “came among” the Nephites before their first generation was ended. Because he was an eloquent believer in the Law of Moses, there has been a variety of surmise as to his background. Was he a Lamanite, or a Jaredite or Mulekite trader? Was his presence among the separated Nephites evidence of early interaction between the Nephites and other civilisations in Nephite lands from the time of their first arrival? This short article reviews the various suggestions about Sherem’s identity and suggests he was most likely a descendant of the original Lehite party but that his identity was purposely suppressed so as not to give him more credibility than he deserved.

Keywords: Antichrist; Jacob (Son of Lehi); Sherem
Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Jacob
ID = [4251]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 37559  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Spendlove, Loren Blake. “Whoso Forbiddeth to Abstain from Meats.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 17-34.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The double negative phrase “forbiddeth to abstain” as found in D&C 49:18 can be confusing and syntactically challenging for readers. While some have argued that the phrase should be read and understood literally, the Doctrine and Covenants of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints indicates that a literal reading is not correct. In this article I demonstrate that the phrase “forbid to abstain” was an accepted English idiom prior to and for a few decades following the receipt of D&C 49, even though it has vanished from contemporary usage completely. The meaning of this idiomatic expression was “command to abstain,” in opposition to its literal meaning. The probable origin of this expression is the Greek text of 1 Timothy 4:3, which in English partially reads “commanding to abstain from meats.” However, in Greek the phrase “commanding to abstain” would be rendered more correctly as “forbidding to abstain.” I conclude that the proper reading of “forbiddeth to abstain” in D&C 49:18 is the idiomatic rather than the literal one and that it should be understood as “commandeth to abstain.”

ID = [4252]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  d-c,interpreter-journal  Size: 42250  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Miasnik, Chris. “Where in Cincinnati Was the Third Edition of the Book of Mormon Printed?” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 35-53.
Display Abstract  Display Keywords

Abstract: The third edition of the Book of Mormon was stereotyped and printed in Cincinnati in 1840. The story of the Church’s printer, Ebenezer Robinson, accomplishing this mission has been available since 1883. What has remained a mystery is exactly where in Cincinnati this event took place; there is no plaque marking the spot, no walking tour pamphlet, no previous images, and its history contains conflicting documentation. This article will attempt to untangle the mystery by using old descriptions, maps of the area, and images. I also honor the printer, Edwin Shepard, whose metal and ink made this edition a reality.

Keywords: Early Church History
ID = [4253]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 37677  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Wirth, Diane E. “Celestial Visits in the Scriptures, and a Plausible Mesoamerican Tradition.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 55-75.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: Scriptural accounts of celestial beings visiting the earth are abundant in both the Bible and the Book of Mormon. Whether a descending deity or angelic beings from celestial realms, they were often accompanied by clouds. In this paper a short analysis of the various types of clouds, including imitation clouds (incense), will be discussed. The relation between the phenomenon of supernatural beings, sometimes in clouds, may have had a great influence on descendants of Book of Mormon cultures. For these people, stories that were told from one generation to the next would have been considered ancient mythological lore. It may be plausible that future generations attempted to duplicate the same type scenario of celestial beings speaking and visiting their people. These events were sometimes recorded in stone.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Helaman
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
ID = [4254]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 42330  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Bowen, Matthew L. “Father Is a Man: The Remarkable Mention of the Name Abish in Alma 19:16 and Its Narrative Context.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 77-93.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The mention of “Abish” and a “remarkable vision of her father” (Alma 19:16) is itself remarkable, since women and servants are rarely named in the Book of Mormon text. As a Hebrew/Lehite name, “Abish” suggests the meaning “Father is a man,” the midrashic components ʾab- (“father”) and ʾîš (“man”) being phonologically evident. Thus, the immediate juxtaposition of the name “Abish” with the terms “her father” and “women” raises the possibility of wordplay on her name in the underlying text. Since ʾab-names were frequently theophoric — i.e., they had reference to a divine Father (or could be so understood) — the mention of “Abish” (“Father is a man”) takes on additional theological significance in the context of Lamoni’s vision of the Redeemer being “born of a woman and … redeem[ing] all mankind” (Alma 19:13). The wordplay on “Abish” thus contributes thematically to the narrative’s presentation of Ammon’s typological ministrations among the Lamanites as a “man” endowed with great power, which helped the Lamanites understand the concept of “the Great Spirit” (Yahweh) becoming “man.” Moreover, this wordplay accords with the consistent Book of Mormon doctrine that the “very Eternal Father” would (and did) condescend to become “man” and Suffering Servant.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Judges
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
ID = [4255]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 43554  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Smith, Julie M. “A Redemptive Reading of Mark 5:25-34.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 95-105.
Display Abstract  

In what is surely one of the saddest tales in the Bible, Jephthah vows that if granted success in battle, he will sacrifice the first person to cross the threshold of his home upon his return. Tragically, it is his only child, a daughter, who hurries out to meet him (Judges 11:29-34). New Testament scholar Mary Ann Beavis shows that this harrowing text has many similarities to the story of Jairus and his daughter in the Gospel of Mark (5:21-24 and 35-43). Mark’s story, however, has a joyous outcome: Jairus intercedes for his daughter, and Jesus raises her from the dead. Beavis calls this a motif inversion, meaning the text in Mark establishes similarities to Jephthah’s story to encourage the audience to compare the events, only to reverse course and have the story end on a very different note. In other words, Mark suggests correspondences but then shows how, when the story plays out in Jesus’ life, it has a dramatically dissimilar ending. Beavis also discusses another widely recognized example of motif inversion in Mark: in the story of the calming of the sea (Mark 4:35-41), there are many echoes of the story of Jonah (1-4). Jesus, like Jonah, is asleep in a boat and is awakened by questions when a terrifying storm threatens. But Jesus, of course, is no Jonah. The motif is inverted as Jesus, who initially parallels Jonah, takes on the role of God, and, being the only one who can, calms the storm.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
ID = [4256]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,old-test  Size: 29272  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Skousen, Royal. “Restoring the Original Text of the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 107-117.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The Book of Mormon Critical Text Project, under the editorship of Royal Skousen, began in 1988 and is now nearing completion. In 2001, facsimile transcripts of the two Book of Mormon manuscripts (volumes 1 and 2 of the critical text) were published by the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies (FARMS). From 2004 to 2009 the six books of volume 4 of the critical text, Analysis of Textual Variants of the Book of Mormon, were published, also by FARMS. Parts 1 and 2 of volume 3 of the critical text, The History of the Text of the Book of Mormon, will be published in early 2015. These two parts will describe all the grammatical editing that the Book of Mormon text has undergone, from 1829 up to the present. When all six parts of volume 3 of the critical text have been published, volume 5 of the critical text, A Complete Electronic Collation of the Book of Mormon, will be released. Within the next couple years, the Joseph Smith Papers will publish photographs of the two Book of Mormon manuscripts, along with transcriptions based on volumes 1 and 2 of the critical text. Nearly all of the work of the project has involved the knowledge and periodic involvement of the Scriptures Committee of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The project itself, however, remains independent of the Church, and none of its findings have involved any ecclesiastical approval or endorsement.

ID = [4257]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 27530  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Carmack, Stanford A. “The Implications of Past-Tense Syntax in the Book of Mormon.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 119-186.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: In the middle of the 16th century there was a short-lived surge in the use of the auxiliary did to express the affirmative past tense in English, as in Moroni «did arrive» with his army to the land of Bountiful (Alma 52:18). The 1829 Book of Mormon contains nearly 2,000 instances of this particular syntax, using it 27% of the time in past-tense contexts. The 1611 King James Bible — which borrowed heavily from Tyndale’s biblical translations of the 1520s and ’30s — employs this syntax less than 2% of the time. While the Book of Mormon’s rate is significantly higher than the Bible’s, it is close to what is found in other English-language texts written mainly in the mid- to late 1500s. And the usage died out in the 1700s. So the Book of Mormon is unique for its time — this is especially apparent when features of adjacency, inversion, and intervening adverbial use are considered. Textual evidence and syntactic analysis argue strongly against both 19th-century composition and an imitative effort based on King James English. Book of Mormon past-tense syntax could have been achieved only by following the use of largely inaccessible 16th-century writings. But mimicry of lost syntax is difficult if not impossible, and so later writers who consciously sought to imitate biblical style failed to match its did-usage at a deep, systematic level. This includes Ethan Smith who in 1823 wrote View of the Hebrews, a text very different from both the Bible and the Book of Mormon in this respect. The same may be said about Hunt’s The Late War and Snowden’s The American Revolution.
Editor’s note: Because of the complex typesetting of this article, it has not been reproduced on this webpage. The reader is referred to the PDF version to view the article.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Moroni
ID = [4258]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 1778  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Spencer, Stan. “Reflections of Urim: Hebrew Poetry Sheds Light on the Directors-Interpreters Mystery.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 187-207.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: In the early editions of the Book of Mormon, Alma refers to the Nephite interpreters as directors. Because director(s) elsewhere refers to the brass ball that guided Lehi’s family through the wilderness, Alma’s use of the term was apparently considered a mistake, and directors was changed to interpreters for the 1920 edition of the Book of Mormon. There are reasons, however, to believe that Alma’s use of directors was intentional. I present contextual evidence that Alma was actually using the Hebrew word urim, which was later translated into English as directors (for the interpreters) and director (for the brass ball), and biblical evidence that those translations are appropriate. Alma may have called the instruments urim to emphasize their sacred importance. As English prose, Alma’s discussion of these sacred instruments is wordy and at times confusing. As Hebrew poetry built around the word urim, it makes more sense. Alma’s apparent sophisticated use of this word suggests that he had a thorough understanding of the ancient connotations of urim and remarkable talent as a classical Hebrew poet.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
ID = [4259]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 51331  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Gardner, Brant A., and Mark Alan Wright. “John L. Sorenson’s Complete Legacy: Reviewing Mormon’s Codex.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 209-221.
Display Abstract  

Mormon’s Codex: An Ancient American Book is unquestionably a monument to an impressive career defending, defining, and explaining the Book of Mormon. John L. Sorenson has been for the New World setting of the Book of Mormon what Hugh Nibley was for the Old World setting. From his earliest 1952 publications using anthropology and geography to defend the Book of Mormon to the 2013 publication of Mormon’s Codex, Sorenson has been the dominant force in shaping scholarly discussions about the Book of Mormon in its New World setting. With an impressive 714 pages of text with footnotes, Mormon’s Codex is physically an appropriate capstone to his long publishing career.

ID = [4260]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 31060  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Rappleye, Neal. “Lehi the Smelter: New Light on Lehi’s Profession.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 223-225.
Display Abstract  

A strong case has been made by John A. Tvedtnes and Jeffrey R. Chadwick that Lehi was a metalworker by profession. Although the text gives several indications of Nephi’s (and by implications, Lehi’s) familiarity with the craft of working metals, prominent Book of Mormon scholar John L. Sorenson nonetheless disagreed with this assessment on the grounds that, “it would be highly unlikely that a man who had inherited land and was considered very wealthy (1 Nephi 3:25) would have been a metalworker, for the men in that role tended to be of lower social status and were usually landless.” More recent findings, however, are changing the picture.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 1 Nephi
ID = [4261]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 5663  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Bowen, Matthew L., and Pedro Olavarria. “Place of Crushing: The Literary Function of Heshlon in Ether 13:25-31.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 14 (2015): 227-239.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The name Heshlon, attested once (in Ether 13:28), as a toponym in the Book of Mormon most plausibly denotes “place of crushing.” The meaning of Heshlon thus becomes very significant in the context of Ether 13:25–31, which describes the crushing or enfeebling of Coriantumr’s armies and royal power. This meaning is also significant in the wider context of Moroni’s narrative of the Jaredites’ destruction. Fittingly, the name Heshlon itself serves as a literary turning point in a chiastic structure which describes the fateful reversal of Coriantumr’s individual fortunes and the worsening of the Jaredites’ collective fortunes. Perhaps Moroni, who witnessed the gradual crushing and destruction of the Nephites, mentioned this name in his abridgement of the Book of Ether on account of the high irony of its meaning in view of the Jaredite war of attrition which served as precursor to the destruction of the Nephites.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Moroni
ID = [4262]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 32282  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:19
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 14 (2015). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2015.
ID = [4423]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 13  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30

Volume 15 (2015)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Questioning: The Divine Plan.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): vii-xv.
Display Abstract  

Some critics of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, chiefly of the secular variety, claim that Latter-day Saints are mind-controlled robots who are forbidden to think for themselves. I collected an example of this claim nearly twenty years ago that will serve to represent many other such expressions before and since.

ID = [4236]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 18443  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:17
Romney, Mitt. “Three Streams of Gratitude for Jesus.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 1-2.
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Note from the editors: In remembrance of the Easter celebration of Jesus’ victory over death, we are pleased to offer this specially written contribution from Mitt Romney.

ID = [4237]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 1765  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:17
Smith, Gregory L. “A Welcome Introduction.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 3-14.
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Review of Brian C. Hales and Laura H. Hales, Joseph Smith’s Polygamy: Toward a Better Understanding. Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2015, 198 pages + index.

ID = [4238]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 27508  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:17
Foster, Suzanne Long. “Providing a Better Understanding for All Concerning the History of Joseph Smith’s Polygamy.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 15-20.
Display Abstract  

Review of Brian C. Hales and Laura H. Hales, Joseph Smith’s Polygamy: Toward a Better Understanding. Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2015, 198 pages + index.

ID = [4239]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 11966  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:17
Foster, Craig L. “An Easier Way to Understanding Joseph Smith’s Polygamy.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 21-28.
Display Abstract  

Review of Brian C. Hales and Laura H. Hales, Joseph Smith’s Polygamy: Toward a Better Understanding. Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2015, 198 pages + index.

ID = [4240]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 17305  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:17
Rappleye, Neal. “Rediscovering the First Vision.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 29-32.
Display Abstract  

Review of: Matthew B. Christensen, The First Vision: A Harmonization of Ten Accounts from the Sacred Grove (Springville, Utah: Cedar Fort Inc., 2014). 51 pp., no index. $14.99.

ID = [4241]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 7807  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:17
Spendlove, Loren Blake. “Say Now Shibboleth, or Maybe Cumorah.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 33-63.
Display Abstract  

Abstract: The Deseret Alphabet represents a bold but failed attempt by 19th century LDS Church leaders to revolutionize English language orthography. As 21st century members of the LDS Church, we can benefit from this less than successful experiment by studying the 1869 Deseret Alphabet Book of Mormon and learning how early church members most likely pronounced Book of Mormon names.

ID = [4242]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 53741  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:17
Carmack, Stanford A. “Why the Oxford English Dictionary (and not Webster’s 1828).” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 65-77.
Display Abstract  

In order to properly consider possible meaning in the Book of Mormon (BofM), we must use the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). Royal Skousen opened the door to this approach, but unfortunately many have resisted accepting it as valid or have not understood the advantages inherent in it. The usual method of consulting Webster’s 1828 American Dictionary of the English Language has serious drawbacks. First, that approach is based on the incorrect assumption that the English language of the text is Joseph Smith’s own language or what he knew from reading the King James Bible (kjb). That incorrect assumption leads us to wrongly believe that nonbiblical lexical meaning in the BofM is to be sought in 1820s American English, or even perhaps from Smith making mistakes in his attempt to imitate biblical language (which is a canard). Second, by using Webster’s 1828 dictionary we can easily be led astray and form inaccurate judgments about old usage and we can miss possible meaning in the text.

ID = [4243]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 28287  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:17
McClellan, Daniel O. “Psalm 82 in Contemporary Latter-day Saint Tradition.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 79-96.
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The nature and function of Psalm 82 has long been a subject of debate within biblical scholarship. The text is rather brief and has no real significant textual instabilities, but it stands out within the Hebrew Bible as a text particularly steeped in mythological imagery. Precritical exegetes understood the gods of the narrative to be human judges, but subsequent textual discoveries and concomitant lexicographical advances, combined with more critical methodologies, have largely undermined that reading. A divine assembly setting has become widely accepted since the middle of the twentieth century, and more contemporary scholarship focuses on the psalm’s possible distinction between yhwh and El, its literary form, and its historical contextualization.

ID = [4244]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size: 48256  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Peterson, Daniel C. “Seeing Ourselves Through the Eyes of a Friendly and Thoughtful Evangelical.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 97-113.
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A review of Richard J. Mouw, Talking with Mormons: An Invitation to Evangelicals. Grand Rapids and Cambridge: Eerdmans, 2012, 99 pages.

ID = [4245]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal,peterson  Size: 38676  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Bowen, Matthew L. “Getting Cain and Gain.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 115-141.
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Abstract: The biblical etiology (story of origin) for the name “Cain” associates his name with the Hebrew verb qny/qnh, “to get,” “gain,” “acquire,” “create,” or “procreate” in a positive sense. A fuller form of this etiology, known to us indirectly through the Book of Mormon text and directly through the restored text of the Joseph Smith Translation, creates additional wordplay on “Cain” that associates his name with murder to “get gain.” This fuller narrative is thus also an etiology for organized evil—secret combinations “built up to get power and gain” (Ether 8:22–23; 11:15). The original etiology exerted a tremendous influence on Book of Mormon writers (e.g., Nephi, Jacob, Alma, Mormon, and Moroni) who frequently used allusions to this narrative and sometimes replicated the wordplay on “Cain” and “getting gain.” The fuller narrative seems to have exerted its greatest influence on Mormon and Moroni, who witnessed the destruction of their nation firsthand — destruction catalyzed by Cainitic secret combinations. Moroni, in particular, invokes the Cain etiology in describing the destruction of the Jaredites by secret combinations. The destruction of two nations by Cainitic secret combinations stand as two witnesses and a warning to latter-day Gentiles (and Israel) against building up these societies and allowing them to flourish.

Topics:    Old Testament Scriptures > Genesis
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Jacob
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Helaman
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Moroni
Book of Moses Topics > Chapters of the Book of Moses > Moses 4–6:12 — Grand Council in Heaven, Adam and Eve
ID = [4246]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal,moses,old-test  Size: 63458  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Rappleye, Neal. “‘The Great and Terrible Judgments of the Lord’: Destruction and Disaster in 3 Nephi and the Geology of Mesoamerica.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 143-157.
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Review of Jerry D. Grover, Jr., Geology of the Book of Mormon. Vineyard, UT: Self-Published, 2014. 233 pp. +xi, including index and references. $39.99.
Abstract: Over recent decades, several Latter-day Saint scholars and scientists have offered analysis and comparison to geologic events and the destruction recorded in 3 Nephi 8-9. Jerry Grover makes an important contribution to this literature as he provides background on geologic processes and phenomena, details the geologic features of the Tehuantepec region (Mesoamerica), and applies this information to not only the description of 3 Nephi 8-9, but other incidents in the Book of Mormon likely connected to geologic events. In doing so, Grover yields new insights into the narratives he examines, and adds clarity to geographic details that have been subject to varying interpretations. .

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > Alma
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Helaman
Book of Mormon Scriptures > 3 Nephi
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Ether
ID = [4247]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 34643  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Bradshaw, Jeffrey M. “Freemasonry and the Origins of Modern Temple Ordinances.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 159-237.
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Abstract: Joseph Smith taught that the origins of modern temple ordinances go back beyond the foundation of the world. Even for believers, the claim that rites known anciently have been restored through revelation raises complex questions because we know that revelation almost never occurs in a vacuum. Rather, it comes most often through reflection on the impressions of immediate experience, confirmed and elaborated through subsequent study and prayer. Because Joseph Smith became a Mason not long before he began to introduce others to the Nauvoo endowment, some suppose that Masonry must have been the starting point for his inspiration on temple matters. The real story, however, is not so simple. Though the introduction of Freemasonry in Nauvoo helped prepare the Saints for the endowment — both familiarizing them with elements they would later encounter in the Nauvoo temple and providing a blessing to them in its own right — an analysis of the historical record provides evidence that significant components of priesthood and temple doctrines, authority, and ordinances were revealed to the Prophet during the course of his early ministry, long before he got to Nauvoo. Further, many aspects of Latter-day Saint temple worship are well attested in the Bible and elsewhere in antiquity. In the minds of early Mormons, what seems to have distinguished authentic temple worship from the many scattered remnants that could be found elsewhere was the divine authority of the priesthood through which these ordinances had been restored and could now be administered in their fulness. Coupled with the restoration of the ordinances themselves is the rich flow of modern revelation that clothes them with glorious meanings. Of course, temple ordinances — like all divine communication — must be adapted to different times, cultures, and practical circumstances. Happily, since the time of Joseph Smith, necessary alterations of the ordinances have been directed by the same authority that first restored them in our day.

ID = [4248]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bradshaw,interpreter-journal  Size: 64838  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Larsen, Val. “A Mormon Theodicy: Jacob and the Problem of Evil.” Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship 15 (2015): 239-266.
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Abstract: Lehi’s son Jacob was troubled by a great theological mystery of his and our day — the problem of evil. If God is both all good and all-powerful, how is it possible for the world to be so full of human and natural evils? Jacob was able to elicit from the Lord responses to the question of why He permits evil to flourish in this world. The Lord elucidates the perennial problem of evil for Jacob and us in three distinct genres and at three different levels of abstraction: at a metaphysical level in a philosophical patriarchal blessing, at a concrete level in the history of the emerging Nephite political economy, and in the Allegory of the Olive Tree.

Topics:    Book of Mormon Scriptures > 2 Nephi
Book of Mormon Scriptures > Jacob
ID = [4249]  Status = Type = journal article  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  bom,interpreter-journal  Size: 64825  Children: 0  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:18
Interpreter Foundation. Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture, Volume 15 (2015). Orem, UT: The Interpreter Foundation, 2015.
ID = [4424]  Status = Type = book  Date = 2015-01-01  Collections:  interpreter-journal  Size:   Children: 14  Rebuilt: 7/22/24 10:12:30

Volume 16 (2015)

Peterson, Daniel C. “Tow